Asked 2 months ago. Active 2 months ago. Viewed 32 times. Improve this question. The Difference Between Predicate Nominative vs. Predicate Adjective. A predicate nominative is a noun that completes the linking verb in a sentence. Predicate adjectives complete the linking verb by describing the subject of a sentence. In your examples, the PCs are said to be subjective, or to have subject orientation. BillJ Could you give an example where a PC has object orientation? And in "I consider Ed untrustworthy ", the PC "untrustworthy" has object orientation.
BillJ Ah, I see. Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. Sign up using Email and Password. Post as a guest Name. When the predicate nominative is a pronoun, traditional grammar says it should be in the nominative subject case. English idiom and logic, however, are not always on the best of terms.
Because he is a predicate nominative in this sentence, the subject form he is correct. Predicate Adjective The predicate adjective follows a linking verb and describes its subject:. You seem sad. Note: some of these verbs can also be used as action verbs. If the verb conveys an action, the word that follows is a direct object DO. Every day you grow older. PA The farmer grows strawberries. The angry dictator turned blue. PA The ox turned the wheel. That music sounds discordant.
PA The bugler sounded the alarm. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! It will be hard to catch those in my novel. Great post, thanks a lot. Very well explained. Great topic! Predicate Complements By Maeve Maddox. Stop making those embarrassing mistakes!
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