Small mice fit nicely into coat pockets.
The complete predicate in this sentence is "fit nicely into coat pockets."
This is because a sentence is made up of two halves: the complete subject and the complete predicate. The latter of these two makes up the part of the sentence that <em>describes</em> the subject, or what the subject is <em>doing</em>.
Not if you think it’ll take you down a wrong path.
Answer:
The root form, which means 'shape,' gives us a number of words that are used every day, including reform, information, deformed, and form. To 'form," for instance, is simply 'to shape,' whereas to reform is merely to 'shape again.