1 / 12

Complements

Complements. Made by Melissa, Kate , and Rebekah. What is a complement?. Complement -Complements are words that come after linking verbs and modify nouns. The most common noun complements are adjectives and nouns, but can be many other parts of speech as well.

espen
Download Presentation

Complements

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Complements Made by Melissa, Kate , and Rebekah

  2. What is a complement? • Complement-Complements are words that come after linking verbs and modify nouns. The most common noun complements are adjectives and nouns, but can be many other parts of speech as well. • Not to be confused with a predicate • Follows a linking verb • A noun clause

  3. Rules • A subject complement follows a linking verb. • Noun, pronoun, or adjective which follows a direct object and renames it or tells what the direct object has become

  4. Rules continued • An indirect complement identifies to or for whom or what the action of the verb is performed • A subject complement follows a linking verb; it is normally an adjective or a noun that renames or defines in some way the subject.

  5. Subjective Complement • A subject complement follows a linking verb. • Normally an adjective or a noun that defines in some way, the subject • A subject complement follows a linking verb; it is normally an adjective or a noun that renames or defines in some way the subject. • Example: A glacier is a body of ice. • Come after a linking verb

  6. Linking verbs • Examples: be, is, are being, might have been, become, seem • Sylvia tasted the spicy squid eyeball stew. • I smell the delicious aroma of a mushroom and papaya pizza baking in the oven. • Swooping out of the clear blue sky, the blue jay appeared on the branch.

  7. Objective Complement • Noun, pronoun, or adjective which follows a direct object and renames it or tells what the direct object has become • may follow certain verbs in English. Sentences with object complements follow the pattern: S + V + O + Complement. Object complements may be either nouns or adjectives. • Example: They considered him a criminal.

  8. Direct object Complement • A subject complement follows a linking verb; it is normally an adjective or a noun that renames or defines in some way the subject. • he direct object and answers the question • A direct object is the receiver of an action in a sentence • Can be a noun or a adjective, or any word acting as a noun or adjective. • Example: Joe sold me his boat.

  9. Indirect object Complement • An indirect complement identifies to or for whom or what the action of the verb is performed • An indirect object comes between the action verb • It is always a noun or pronoun and never appears by itself without a direct object. • Example: Joe sold me his boat.

  10. Identify this Complement! Find the direct object, indirect object, objective, and subjective(1 sentence has 2) • The instructor gave his best students A’s. • Brandon is a gifted athlete. • The clown got the children to excited.

  11. Answers Objective, subjective, Direct, and Indirect • students; A’s • Athlete • Excited

  12. Work Cited http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/objects.htm http://www.chompchomp.com/terms/subjectcomplement.htm http://englishplus . com./grammar/00000020.htm

More Related