Question
the whole school complete subject or complete predicate
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
In the sentence "The whole school," this phrase functions as a complete subject.
The complete subject includes all the words that tell who or what the sentence is about. In this case, "the whole school" specifies the subject of the sentence. For example, if you expand the sentence to "The whole school went on a field trip," "the whole school" remains the complete subject, while "went on a field trip" would be the complete predicate.
So, to clarify:
- **Complete Subject:** The whole school
- **Complete Predicate:** went on a field trip (in this expanded example)
The complete subject includes all the words that tell who or what the sentence is about. In this case, "the whole school" specifies the subject of the sentence. For example, if you expand the sentence to "The whole school went on a field trip," "the whole school" remains the complete subject, while "went on a field trip" would be the complete predicate.
So, to clarify:
- **Complete Subject:** The whole school
- **Complete Predicate:** went on a field trip (in this expanded example)