This post provides contextual examples of all these in addition to practice examples | This is one of the Predicate cases |
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If it does, then this is only one type of predicate | To sum up, the predicate defines the Mubtada or tells us more about it |
Salam Zoubir, Your point is clear, brother and what you have learnt is absolutely correct.
Note that the Predicate here is the same in number and gender as its subject | because — if we take your example — we would ask: Who is crying in sadness? Here are examples for each:• Now, is this judgement true? But where is its predicate? Salam to all of you, You know Fisal, when I was a pupil, I learned that a nominal sentence is the one that STARTS with a noun, even if it has a verb within |
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This Khabar often comes after the subject | The Predicate Can be a Verbal Sentence |
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But how could that be explained as a nominal sentence? For example, in the sentence I can't put up with Alex, the words put up with meaning 'tolerate' may be referred to in common language as a phrase English expressions like this are frequently called phrasal verbs but technically they do not form a complete phrase, since they do not include Alex, which is the complement of the preposition with | Tne animal is called a cow |
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This predicate starting with a verb is called a Verbal Sentence Khabar predicate | Yes, It happened here in this example that the predicate is the whole Verbal sentence |