We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.

Examples

Example 1

Shane shoveled his initials into the snowy driveway.

We admire Shane's creativity, but it's not going to make getting the car out of the garage much easier. Here, the complete predicate is made up of shoveled, which is the main verb, and then all of the words that modify shoveled.

Example 2

Lacey composed an original rap about mitochondria for extra credit in her biology class.

What rhymes with mitochondria? Sadly, basically nothing.

What's the complete predicate in this sentence? That's right: it's the main verb, composed, and then all of the words that complete its meaning.

Example 3

The boys surf Turtle Toes Cove every Saturday morning.

In this gnarly example, the main verb, surf, plus all of the words that complete its meaning, create the complete predicate. Those boys should watch out for sharks, though.