SUBJECTS AND PREDICATES Teacher's Guide
SUBJECTS AND PREDICATES Teacher's Guide
This unit includes a week and a half of daily bell-ringer activities, a quiz, and two practice worksheets.
SUGGESTED TIMELINE:
Start the Day One bell ringer on a Monday.
The “Practice” worksheets can be done as a class any time during the week (or skipped if you
feel your students don’t need it.)
By Friday, if you feel the class is ready for it, give the unit quiz.
o If you feel like the entire class needs additional practice to master the concept, there are
three additional bell-ringer activities.
o Differentiation: The “Alternate Quiz” included in the packet is a slightly modified quiz
geared toward students with IEPs that call for such modifications.
After the quiz, a student who clearly failed to grasp one or more of the week’s concepts should
be assigned one of the “Practice” worksheets. After completing the worksheet, the student can
retake the unit quiz for an improved grade.
Starting a unit mid-week isn’t a problem at all—don’t feel like you MUST start on a Monday!
OBJECTIVES:
1. Students should understand that…
a. A subject is who or what the sentence is about (the thing or person doing the action)
b. A predicate is what the subject does
c. A group of words that is missing either a subject or a predicate CANNOT be a sentence
2. Students should be able to…
a. Identify the complete subject and predicate of a sentence
b. Write sentences that contain a subject and a predicate
DAILY ROUTINE:
Have the day’s bell-ringer activity up on a projector when the students come to class each day. I have
my students do the assignment on quarter-sheets of paper (I cut them up and have a stack available
each day). Days Four and Six in this unit require copyediting with proofreading marks; since it takes
too long for students to copy the incorrect sentences and then edit them, a page of quarter-size student
answer sheets are provided for those days (see the pages after the last bell ringer.)
Students should spend the first five minutes working silently (use that time to take roll and then
circulate around the room to keep kids on task.) After the five minutes of work time, spend the next
five minutes going over the answers. Use the correction session each day to explain new concepts,
clarify ideas, and correct misconceptions. For each question, I like to have my students turn to the
person next to them and share their answer; then I ask a student to volunteer an answer. If a student
answers incorrectly, find someone else who can give the correct answer. Help the class understand the
concept a little better and then ask the first student a question like, “Explain why your first answer was
wrong.” I’ve never had a student feel offended by this—if anything, it gives kids a chance to redeem
themselves after what might have been an embarrassing moment of being wrong in front of everyone.
If you use an overhead projector, a Smart Board, or project onto a white marker board, you can
choose a student each day to come to the front and write answers or corrections as other students
volunteer them.
How you grade the daily bell-ringer questions is up to you. I used to give my students full credit as
long as they attempted each question and then participated in the answer session. But this year, I
actually stopped grading the daily practice altogether—so students are graded solely on the unit quiz
(and sometimes the practice worksheet.) This has worked great. The only issue with doing it like this is
that you have to make sure you don’t let kids get away with not doing the bell-ringer—I sometimes
hold them during lunch if they were slacking off and didn’t do it.
The Wordplay at the end of each day’s questions can be a way to earn extra credit if you choose. As
incentive to work quickly, I tell my students they can’t begin on the Wordplay until they’re finished
with the other questions, and I always offer a piece of candy to the first student to get the answer right
or the student with the best answer or most answers. (You’d be surprised what junior-high students
will do for a Starburst or a Jolly Rancher!)
LITERATURE:
This unit contains example selections from the novel
Incarceron by Catherine Fisher.
DAY
Ten-Minute Grammar One Subject and Predicate
Identify the subject in each of the following sentences (who or what the sentence is about):
A sneaky rat named Scratch was pilfering food from the pantry.
1. Suddenly, the rat heard a low growl and a hiss.
2. Scratch bolted as fast as he could.
3. Captain Meow, the black tomcat, raced at Scratch’s heels.
If students left out the appositive phrase, “the black tomcat,” that’s not the end of the world.
But point out that it is part of the subject.
Identify the predicate in each of the following sentences (what the subject did):
Identify the subject in each of the following sentences from Incarceron by Catherine Fisher:
3. Jared had crouched and was picking up the sharp, curved fragments of
glass.
Like the compound subject in number 1, this is a compound predicate—two predicates
connected to a single subject. This is important to point out because later when they learn
about clauses, students might confuse this for two clauses because it seems to have two
predicates; but it’s still a single clause.
Read the following excerpt from Incarceron by Catherine Fisher and then answer the
following questions:
(a)Inside, he latched the flimsy door and sat on the bed. (b) The
room was cold and smelled of unwashed clothes, but it was quiet. (c)
Slowly, he let himself lie back. (d) He breathed in and inhaled terror.
1. What is the predicate of sentence (a)? (Hint: it’s a compound predicate,
so the subject is doing two things, which are both part of the predicate).
latched the flimsy door and sat on the bed (compound predicate)
2. What are the subjects of sentence (b)? (Hint: the sentence has two
subjects because it’s a compound sentence—two independent clauses.)
“The room” and “it” (two subjects because it’s a compound sentence)
3. Would the word “Slowly” in sentence (c) be part of the subject or the
predicate? Predicate – it’s an adverb modifying the verb “lie”
4. In sentence (d), is “breathed in” part of the subject or predicate?
Predicate – once again, a compound predicate
Using the proper proofreading marks, correct the six errors in this excerpt:
then
The swan was moving. it seemed to glide, peacefully at first; than it reared
up, flapping it’s great wings and she saw an arrow come slowly out of the
Identify the subject in each of the following sentences from Incarceron by Catherine Fisher:
Read the following excerpt from Incarceron by Catherine Fisher and then answer the
following questions:
(a)Without waiting for his answer, she turned and swept back into
the Den. (b) Slowly, Finn rubbed a hand around the back of his neck,
feeling the damp of sweat. (c) He realized his body was a knot of
tension; he made himself breathe out. (d) Then he froze.
1. Who or what is the subject of sentence (a)? she
2. Is “the damp of sweat” the subject of sentence (b)? No
3. How many subjects and predicates does sentence (c) have? Three of each
“He (subject) realized (predicate) his body (subject) was a knot of tension
(predicate); he (subject) made himself breathe out (predicate).”
4. Is the word “Then” in sentence (d) part of the subject or the predicate?
Predicate; it’s telling us “when” the action happened, making it an adverb
modifying the verb.
Using the proper proofreading marks, correct the six errors in this excerpt:
sp. said
For a moment he, couldn’t speak. Before he could draw a brethe, she says,
“You must swear my safety. But he said “they have to pay the ransom.”
The comma after “moment” isn’t in the book and so doesn’t count as one of the six. However, it
should technically be there. Students might also consider moving the comma as one correction, still
making it six in total.
Read the following excerpt from Incarceron by Catherine Fisher and then answer the
following questions:
(a)“The honor is ours,” she said. (b) “Perhaps you’d like to come
into the parlor. (c) We have cider and newly baked cakes as
refreshment after your journey.” (d) Well, she hoped they did. (e)
Turning, she saw that three of the servants had gone and the gaps in
the line had closed swiftly behind them.
1. Is the word “honor” in sentence (a) part of the subject or the predicate?
Subject
2. In sentence (b), is the word “parlor” a verb, noun, pronoun, or adverb?
Noun
3. Is “cider and newly baked cakes” the subject of sentence (c)? No
4. In sentence (a), which word is a linking verb and which word is an
action verb? “is” is a linking verb; “said” is an action verb
5. Sentence (e) is a compound-complex sentence and has THREE subjects;
what are they? “she,” “three of the servants,” and “the gaps in the line”
6. In sentence (d), which two words are pronouns? “she” and “they”
7. In sentence (d), is “hoped” part of the subject or the predicate? Predicate
8. List three nouns from sentence (e). servants, gaps, line
NAME: PERIOD:
In the following sentences, identify the underlined portion as the SUBJECT or PREDICATE:
1. ____________
PredicateAbraham Lincoln served as the 16th President of the United States.
2. ____________
Subject In the 1860 presidential election, Lincoln defeated Democrat Stephen Douglas,
John Breckinridge of the Southern Democrats, and Jon Bell of the Constitutional Union Party.
Subject President Lincoln presided over the Civil War and the end of slavery.
5. ____________
Subject Many scholars rank Lincoln as the greatest president in U.S. history.
6. ____________
In order to have a full sentence, you must have a SUBJECT and a PREDICATE.
Decide if each of the following groups of words is a full sentence or not (answer YES or NO.)
8. ______
YESHe was elected to the Illinois Legislature but turned down the position, hoping instead
to become a senator.
9. ______
NO Was not chosen by the Illinois legislature to be a U.S. senator in 1855.
NO Later nominated to be the Republican Senator from Illinois, opposing Democrat Stephen
10. ______
A. Douglas.
11. ______
YESLincoln spoke against the Dred Scott Decision in 1857.
YESHe delivered an important speech on slavery in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1860.
12. ______
ANSWERS WILL VARY.
Some sentences might have more than one person or thing doing the action—
that would be a COMPOUND SUBJECT. A sentence might also have a subject
doing more than one action—then you have a COMPOUND PREDICATE.
_________________________________________.
_________________________________________.
Extra
Ten-Minute Grammar Practice Subject and Predicate
NAME: PERIOD:
For sentences 1 – 4, decide if the underlined portion is part of the SUBJECT or PREDICATE:
1. ____________
PredicateDuring the Civil War, President Lincoln supervised the selection of top generals.
2. ____________
Subject Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address became one of the most quoted speeches in
American history.
3. ____________
PredicateSix days after the surrender of Confederate general Robert E. Lee, Lincoln died.
4. ____________
Subject His death marked the first assassination of a U.S. president.
In most SIMPLE sentences, the SUBJECT makes up the beginning of the sentence
and the PREDICATE comes afterwards.
For sentences 5 – 8, underline the SUBJECT once and underline the PREDICATE twice:
5. Abraham Lincoln was born in a one-room log cabin on the 12th of February, 1809.
6. His younger brother, Thomas, was born in 1812 but died in infancy.
8. Nancy Hanks Lincoln, Abraham’s mother, died of “milk sickness” before Lincoln’s 10th birthday.
9. Abraham shot a wild turkey at age 7 but felt bad about it and never hunted again.
In other sentences, however, the SUBJECT and PREDICATE are harder to
recognize because part of the predicate comes before the subject (often an
adverb phrase that tells when or how the action happened.)
10. After his father’s marriage to Sarah Bush Johnston, young Abraham developed a good
relationship with his stepmother, Sarah.
11. Often borrowing books from others, Lincoln loved to read and learn.
13. At age 22, Abe studied Shakespeare and participated in a local debate club.
In COMPOUND and COMPLEX sentences, there are actually two SUBJECTS and
two PREDICATES (because compound and complex sentences have two clauses
in them.) The conjunction that links the two clauses together is marked in bold,
and it isn’t actually part of subject or the predicate.
For sentences 19 – 22, underline the SUBJECTS once and the PREDICATES twice:
14. Abraham gave his first political speech in 1830; he spoke in favor of improving navigation on
the Sangamon River near his home.
15. Lincoln was elected captain of a rifle company during the Black Hawk War, but he didn’t end
up fighting any battles.
16. In 1832, Lincoln ran as a candidate for the Illinois General Assembly, but he lost the election.
17. Lincoln was left in debt when the village store he owned in New Salem failed. **
18. Even though he lost his first election, Lincoln ran for the General Assembly again in 1834.
19. Abraham became a leader of the Whig Party after he was re-elected in 1836.
20. His girlfriend, Mary Owens, rejected him when Abe proposed to her in 1837.
** Technically, there are two subjects and predicates in “the village store he owned in New Salem
failed.” “The village store” is a subject with “failed” as its predicate; “he” is another subject with
“owned in New Salem” as its predicate. The problem is that there is an implied “that” before the “he.”
Because that would be confusing to junior-high grammarians, it’s better to treat “the village store he
owned in New Salem” as the subject, which is also perfectly true.
QUIZ ANSWER KEY
NAME: PERIOD:
4. Growing up on the western frontier, he and his family were not wealthy.
A. he and his family
B. the western frontier