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SUBJECT AND PREDICATE

Subject and predicate



The sentence in English consists two parts:a subject and predicate. Look at the following sentences:
               Boys play. 
               Nalini danced. 
               They fled. 
               It shines. 
               She sings. 
In the above two-word sentences, the first word is the subject and the second is the predicate. Here the subject consists of a single word,and so does the predicate. 


The sentence

The subject in a sentence may be one of the following:
    (a) A noun(singular or plural) 
                  Raju plays. 
                  Birds sing. 
    (b) A pronoune
                  She loves music. 
                  They speak English. 
   
    (c) A noun phrase:
                  The sun rises in the east. 
                  The new books are costly. 
    (d) A gerund:
                  Walking is a good exercise. 
                  Smoking is injurious to health. 
     (e) A to-infinitive:
                  To drive very fast is dangerous. 
                  To forgive is divine. 
     (f) A clause :
                  That he is a fool is known to all. 
                  What she says is stupid. 
     (g) The anticipatory or introductory it:
                   It is easy to please him. 
                   It is not difficult to learn driving. 
     (h) The introductory there:
                   There are 500000 books in our library. 
                   There is still scope for improvement. 

The predicate



The predicate in a sentence consists of the following:
       (a) A verb:
                     Australian travel. 
                     The moon shines. 
       (b) A verb + direct object:
                      He burned his fingers
                      I like ice cream. 
       (c) A verb + compliment:
                      Jayan is a teacher
                      The dream came true
       (d) A verb+indirect object+direct object:
                      His uncle gave her a present
                      I asked him a question
       (e) A verb+direct object +object complement:
                      We elected him president
                      They made me captain
        (f) A verb + adverb:
                      Rajaji spoke slowly
                      The minister arrived late
        (g) A verb+ adverbial phrase:
                       His uncle lives in Mumbai
                       The meeting is on Thursday
         (h) A verb+noun clause. 
                       This is what he meant. 
                       The fact is that he is not frank. 
          
          (I) A verb+ adverbial clause
                       He failed because he had not studied. 
                       The watch broke when it fell on the                            marble floor. 
 There are also other items possible in the predicate like auxiliary verbs. We shall see them in the following chapters. 


  

THE SENTENCE

THE SENTENCE



A sentence is a group of words arranged in a particular order to convey some sense, and is used as a unit of communication. 
       Lions roar. 
       I study grammer. 
       Everybody breathes. 
       They sailed for Europe last month. 
       The sugar weighed ten pounds. 
       The sun rises in the east. 
Sometimes single words like yes, no, certainly, fine, etc. also convey meaning:
        Do you know the answer? Yes. 
        Are you a doctor? No. 
        Will you attend the meeting? Certainly. 
        How is the weather? Fine. 


These short responses, though they convey meaning, cannot be treated as grammatical sentence. Moreover, they are peculiar in the sense that they can be understood only in their proper context. 
        The words in a sentence should be arranged in particular order. 
        He will come on Friday. 
        Everybody admired her. 
        India is a vast country. 
Though the words in the following strings are meaningful individually they do not form grammatical sentence:
        Friday come he will on
        Her admired everybody
        India a country vast is