Originated From
AOL Search

What is the simple subject and simple prediacte in this sentence "Samson ruled as an Israelite judge for twenty years."

what is the simple subject and simple prediacte in this sentence "Samson ruled as an Israelite judge for twenty years."

Liked this question? Tell your friends about it

3 Answers

Order by
Oldest to Newest
Newest to Oldest
Votes

It has been a long time since I learned this in school.

Samson [simple subject] ruled [simple predicate] as an Israelite judge for twenty years.

The simple subject in this case is the proper noun Samson. Simple subjects are usually nouns or pronouns. A noun is a person, place, thing, or an idea. A pronoun is a word that takes the place of one of more nouns. (Here are some pronouns: I, he, she, it, you, we, they). The simple predicate would be the verb, in this case ruled. A verb is a word that shows action or a state of being.

The simple subject is :  Samson.  The simple predicate is:  ruled.  The subject will never be in a prepositional phrase.

let'sfigure it out

The simple subject is :  Samson.  The simple predicate is:  ruled.  The subject will never be in a prepositional phrase.

let'sfigure it out

Related Questions

Other people asked questions on similar topics, check out the answers they received:

Asked: What is correct grammar: I slept wonderful or I ...

What is correct grammar: I slept wonderful or I slept wonderfully

Asked: Why do you put an before historiacal moment ...

Why do you put an before historiacal moment enstead of a historical moment English grammar question

Asked: Which is grammatically correct: leader/s or leader ...

which is grammatically correct: leader/s or leader(s)