This section is from the book "Lessons In English", by Chestine Gowdy, Lora M. Dexheimer. Also available from Amazon: Lessons in English.
The preceding exercise shows that a declarative sentence must have three parts, - one to represent the subject of thought, or the thing about which the assertion is made; one to represent the attribute which is asserted; and one to assert. These parts are called the subject of the sentence, the predicate attribute, and the copula.
 
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