What is the subject and predicate of.

Bloomers were the first slacks for women.
Subject Bloomers predicate were the first slack?

These pants were very loose and comfortable.
Subject pants predicate loose comfortable?

1. Your subject is correct. But the entire predicate is "were the first slacks for women".

2. Every part of the sentence is included in either the subject or predicate.

What is the complete subject?

The predicate must include the verb. What is the complete predicate?

The subject of the sentence "Bloomers were the first slacks for women" is "Bloomers" and the predicate is "were the first slacks for women." To identify the subject, you can ask yourself "Who or what is the sentence about?" In this case, it is about "Bloomers," so that is the subject. The predicate is the part of the sentence that provides information about the subject, what the subject is doing or what is being said about it. In this case, the predicate is "were the first slacks for women," indicating that Bloomers were the first type of pants/slacks designed for women.

Similarly, in the sentence "These pants were very loose and comfortable," the subject is "pants" and the predicate is "were very loose and comfortable." The subject is the noun or pronoun that the sentence is about, and the predicate is the part of the sentence that gives information about the subject. Therefore, in this sentence, "pants" is the subject and "were very loose and comfortable" is the predicate, describing the condition of the pants.