Answer:
<u>Canning </u>or<u> freezing</u> keeps food from spoiling.
Explanation:
I've underlined the subject and written the predicate in bold letters.
The subject is the part of the sentence that tells us who or what is performing an action expressed by the verb. It can also tell us who or what is being described by the predicate.
The predicate tells us what the subject is doing or describes the subject.
Here, the subject are the words <em>canning</em> and<em> freezing</em>. This is a compound subject - a subject that consists of two or more simple subjects that share a verb or verb phrase. The verb these words share is <em>keeps</em>. This verb is a part of the complete predicate: <em>keeps food from spoiling.</em>
To confirm this, we can ask:
- for the subject - <em>What keeps food from spoiling? </em><em>Canning or freezing.</em>
- for the predicate - <em>What does canning or freezing do? It </em><em>keeps</em><em> </em><em>food from spoiling.</em>
Looking at a problem in a different perspective
Answer:
Social worker: people
Air Traffic Controller: data
Butcher: things
Counselor: people
Doctor: people
Mechanic: things
Model: things
Welder: things
Teacher: people
Writer: things
Answer:
The soilders were ready for combat due to theier extensive training.
Explanation:
The word combat is used as a verb tense in every other example, as it is represented as the act of doing something.