The predicate is the part of a sentence that tells what the subject does or is. It always includes a verb and provides information about the subject. The predicate answers questions like "what does the subject do?" or "what is the subject like?"
In "Ruby plays with blocks," the predicate is "plays with blocks" because it tells what Ruby does. The predicate contains action verbs that show what is happening in the sentence.
Finding Subjects and Predicates
To identify the subject and predicate in any sentence, ask yourself two simple questions. First, ask "Who or what is this sentence about?" to find the subject. Then ask "What does the subject do?" to find the predicate.
Practice with these examples: In "Owen eats an apple," Owen is the subject and "eats an apple" is the predicate. In "The happy bird sits on the branch," "The happy bird" is the subject and "sits on the branch" is the predicate.