Ask for help in high school English predicate non predicate differences and usage

Updated on educate 2024-03-16
2 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The distinction between predicate and non-predicate is easy to understand as follows:

    The doing of being doing in the present continuous tense is a predicate, and the non-predicate verb can act as all the components except the predicate. It can be used as a subject, a predicate, a definite, an object, an object complement, and so on.

    A sentence can have only one verb predicate (except compound and parallel sentences), and if there are 2 verbs, one of the verbs becomes its non-predicate verb form.

    There are four forms of non-predicate verbs: infinitive, gerund, participle: present participle, past participle.

    1.Infinitive (todo): to be the subject, object, predicate, definite, adverbial, and complement.

    2.Gerund: to be the subject, object, predicate, and definite.

    3.Doing participle: making predicates, predicates, adverbials, and complements.

    4.Past participle (done): to do predicates, definites, adverbials, and complements.

    A predicate is acted up by a verb, and a verb denotes the action or state of a person or thing.

    According to their function in sentences, verbs can be divided into four categories, namely, substantive verbs (referring to a specific static e.g., think, love, etc. or dynamic e.g., run, walk, etc.), verbs (commonly used be, feel, get, look, taste, etc.), auxiliary verbs (commonly used to form negative sentences and interrogative sentences), modal verbs (commonly used can, may, must, shall, etc., should, etc., the modal verb must be followed by the verb after the word).

    Non-predicate verb usage:

    To do is active and done. Non-predicates can be used as "subject-object expressions": to do often expresses "specific things", and sometimes also expresses future events.

    The doing often means "usual" and "non-predicate" can be used as a definite sentence: to do means "will be ......"doing" means "......"."done" means "(has) been what". to do can be used as an adverbial sentence and placed at the beginning of the sentence to form "purpose".

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    From the often said subject-verb-object form (e.g., I love you), it can be seen that the subject is a noun or gerund, the predicate is a verb, and the object is also a noun or noun phrase (these four nouns contain gerunds), that is, the verb after this noun (i.e., subject) belongs to the predicate component in the sentence, and the non-predicate is that the verb acts as another component in the sentence in addition to the predicate component, such as an adverbial.

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