Pattern 4 and 5 Miss Johnson Sentence Diagramming Pattern 4 and 5 Miss Johnson
Linking Verbs Linking Verbs: connect the subject to the element that follows the verb Tasted, smelled, looked, sounded, felt, became, seems, appear, remains, turns, grows Can be replaced with a be verb IS AM ARE WAS WERE BE BEING BEEN
Subject – linking verb – subjective complement: predicate adjective Shortened: s – lv – pa REMEMBER: a prepositional phrase can function as an adjective Predicate Adjective: describes the subject
Subject – linking verb – subjective complement: predicate adjective Example #1 The king seems unhappy.
Subject – linking verb – subjective complement: predicate adjective Example #2 The nights grow shorter before the summer solstice.
Subject – linking verb – subjective complement: predicate adjective Example #3 The lemonade tasted so good on such a hot, summer day.
Subject – linking verb – subjective complement: predicate adjective Example #4 The king seems out of sorts.
Subject – linking verb – Subjective Complement: Predicate Nominative Shortened: s – lv – pn Predicate Nominative: renames the subject; is identical with it
Subject – linking verb – Subjective Complement: Predicate Nominative Example #1 The king became a tyrant
Subject – linking verb – Subjective Complement: Predicate Nominative Example #2 The leaves turn a red color in the fall.
Subject – linking verb – Subjective Complement: Predicate Nominative Example #3 The farmer grew corn.
Subject – linking verb – Subjective Complement: Predicate Nominative The farmer grew sad as he talked about his childhood.
Subject – linking verb – Subjective Complement: Predicate Nominative Example #4 After ten minutes, her face grew a bright red.