Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - What are predicates, attributive clauses, and linking verbs?

What are predicates, attributive clauses, and linking verbs?

1 Predicatives are used to describe the identity, nature, character, characteristics and status of the subject. Predicatives often consist of nouns, adjectives, adverbs, prepositional phrases, infinitives, -ing of verbs, and clauses. To act, it is often placed after the linking verb (words such as be, become, appear, seem, look, sound, feel, get, smell, etc.). If the predicate of a sentence is also served by a sentence, then the sentence that serves as the predicate is called a predicative clause. 2. Link verb is also called link verb. As a link verb, it has its own word meaning, but it cannot be used as a predicate alone. It must be followed by a predicative (also called a complement) (adjective) to form a linking structure to explain the subject. Condition, nature, characteristics, etc.

Explanation:

Some copulas are also substantive verbs. When the verb expresses the substantive meaning, it has word meaning and can be used as a separate predicate, for example:

He feel ill yesterday.

He felt ill yesterday. (feel is a linking verb, followed by a complement to explain the condition of the subject.) 3 Attributive clauses (Attributive Clauses) serve as attributives in the sentence and modify a noun or pronoun. The modified noun, phrase or pronoun is the antecedent. Attributive clauses usually appear after the antecedent and are introduced by relative words (relative pronouns or relative adverbs). For details, please see: /view/56536.htm