James, Samuel, and Sophia are discussing grammar. James says, ‘A compound predicate is when two or more simple subjects have the same predicate.’ Samuel disagrees and says, ‘No, it’s when two or more simple predicates have the same subject.’ Sophia thinks it’s a predicate made up of two or more words. Who is correct?
A. James: Two or more simple subjects that have the same predicate
B. Samuel: Two or more simple predicates that have the same subject
C. Sophia: A predicate that is made up of two or more words
D. None of them: A predicate that is a complete thought
Select your answer:
Random Topics:
Wish SentencesVocabulary : Coming & GoingPre-intermediateWho am I?Relative Clauses & Real ConditionalsArticles - rulesComparison DegreeSentence Structure and Grammar RulesWish / If only ( Present)
Other quiz:
Present Simple Tense › ViewMr Chenla ______(work) in his office.
A. works
B. work
C. working
Tenses › View
The children ______ their kites in the field when it started to rain heavily.
A. are flying
B. would fly
C. will fly
D. were flying
Trending Topics
How to use : Read the question carefully, then select one of the answers button.