01.2. Daily Grammar - Compound Subjects and Predicates
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? Douglas firs and the other trees of the pine family appeal to Christmas tree shoppers.
Douglas firs; trees
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? Do the reds and golds of autumn trees appeal to your sense of beauty?
reds; golds
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? The redwood and the sequoia are found in California.
redwood; sequoia
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? During the fall my sister and I always gather colorful leaves.
sister and I
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? Some species of bats fly much slower and cannot reach the same height as others.
fly; reach
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? Some bats can fly sixty miles per hour and can also soar to a height of ten thousand feet.
can fly; can soar
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? Most conifers and many broad-leaved plants are evergreen.
conifers; plants
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? Does the cypress or the magnolia bear cones?
cypress; magnolia
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? The vampire bat drinks cow's blood but seldom consumes human blood.
drinks; consumes
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? More than nine thousand species of bats exist and find habitats worldwide.
exist; find
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? Live oaks and white oaks should not be confused with one another.
live oaks; white oaks
What is the compound subject or predicate in this sentence? Maples and elms are deciduous trees and lose their leaves.
maples; elms