Men and women played on the college volleyball yeam [team] This is a simple sentence with a compound subject "men" and "women". The predicate is "played on the collge volleyball team."
Yes, "My cousin thinks he was lucky to get into his favorite college" is a simple sentence, not a compound sentence. A compound sentence consists of two independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction. In this case, the sentence contains only one independent clause.
How old was Martin when he graduated college? (Martin was how old when he graduated college?)how - adverb, modifies the adjective 'old';old - adjective, functioning as a predicate adjective;was - linking verb;Martin - proper noun, subject of the sentence;when - conjunction;he - personal pronoun, subject of the second part of the compound sentence;graduated - verb;college - noun, direct object of the verb 'graduated'.
How old was Martin when he entered college? (Martin was how old when he entered college?)how - adverb, modifies the adjective 'old';old - adjective, functioning as a predicate adjective;was - linking verb;Martin - proper noun, subject of the sentence;when - conjunction;he - personal pronoun, subject of the second part of the compound sentence;entered - verb;college - noun, direct object of the verb 'entered'.
volleyball was played at Springfield College.
What was the name of his college? (The name of his college was what?)What - interrogative pronoun, functioning as a predicate nominative;was - linking verb;the - article;name - noun, functioning as subject of the sentence;of - preposition;his - pronoun (possessive adjective), describes the noun 'college';college - noun, object of the preposition 'of'.
No. A predicate must have a verb, and a verb all by itself can be a predicate. But there are verbs that are not predicates, and there can be predicates that have much more in them than verbs. Example 1 is a sentence with a predicate that's just a verb.Example 2 is a sentence with a predicate that has a verb and more.Example 3 is a sentence with a verb that is not in itself a predicate. The predicates are in italics. My sister works.My sister works at a coffee shop after school. My sister wants to earn money for college.In example 3, the entire predicate is "wants to earn money for college." The main verb is "wants." "To earn" is also a verb, but it is not the main verb and it is not a predicate. In this case it is functioning as a noun to say what it is that my sister wants (a verbal noun acting as the object of a transitive verb). === ===
Yes, Presbyterian College volleyball is Division 1.
waiuku college waiuku college
The word 'lonely' is an adjective, which functions as a predicate adjective (also called a subject complement) following a linking verb that modifies (describes) the subject of the verb.Example: Mom is lonely since Jane went off to college.
On average, college volleyball players are typically around 6 feet tall.
1896 - Springfield College had the first game of "Volleyball".
The average height of a college volleyball player is typically around 6 feet tall.