The correct interrogative pronoun is "Who" in "Who are you?" because "whom" is used as a relative pronoun and is used to denote a indirect object.
Answer:
B. The lovely young ballet company
Explanation:
I will be completly honest! I am horrible at predicates so I looked it up and here is an example off the internet.
Here's an example. In the sentence "The wall is purple," the subject is "wall," the predicate adjective is "purple" and the linking verb is "is." So, it's subject, verb, and predicate adjective.
pred·i·cate
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Grammar
Logic
nounGRAMMAR
/ˈpredəkət/
the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject (e.g., went home in John went home ).
"predicate adjective"
verb
/ˈpredəˌkāt/
1.
GRAMMAR•LOGIC
state, affirm, or assert (something) about the subject of a sentence or an argument of a proposition.
"a word that predicates something about its subject"
Answer:
Explanation:
The heating system on the second floor is being fixed," Dr. Cooper explained. "Please bring these extra blankets for the patients."
Hilda 'H.D.' Doolittle, Ezra Pound, and Richard Aldington were the pioneers of modernist poetry, writing in rejection of the formalism of Victorian poetry and European society. World War I had a profound effect on the further development of the modernist movement. The poetry that followed World War I reflected the disillusionment of those who had experienced the tragedy and horror of modern combat. T.S. Eliot's 'The Wasteland' is an example of the disjointed and fragmented verse arising from this disillusionment.