Asked by tyler
The predicate of a sentence is
a group of words that is acted upon by the subject.
what is said about the subject or what the subject does.
the form of a verb used to show when an action happened.
a verb quality that tells if its subject performs or receives action.
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Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Answer: "what is said about the subject or what the subject does."
Explanation: the predicate of a sentence contains the verb and any words that tell what the subject is or does (for example, "ate the apple" in "She ate the apple"). The other choices describe object, tense, and voice.
Explanation: the predicate of a sentence contains the verb and any words that tell what the subject is or does (for example, "ate the apple" in "She ate the apple"). The other choices describe object, tense, and voice.
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