1. an adverb clause will always contain a subject, verb, and subordinate conjunction (this is what keeps it from being a complete sentence)
<span>2) until his arms ached. (his arms = subject, ached = verb, until = subordinate conjunction)
3) once they saw her car turn the corner. (</span>they = subject, saw = verb, once = subordinate conjunction)
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4) When the storm started (</span>the storm = subject, started = verb, when = subordinate conjunction)
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5) while being taught to bake cupcakes. (</span>she = subject, taught = verb, while = subordinate conjunction)
Explain (in the best way possible) what you do with children, how long you've wanted to work with kids, why do you want to do this. things like that.
<u>The correct answer is: The seats in the theater were uncomfortable. </u> The adjective predicate is an adjective that is placed after a copulative verb (it is a verb that does not express any type of action, it only associates the subject with the predicate), for example: be, seem, become, and this adjective describes to the subject In the sentence, the adjective predicate is uncomfortable.