If the "phrase" you are quoting is this: "an interesting novel provides good entertainment" it is not a phrase; it is a complete sentence. Therefore it would not be considered something called a "gerund phrase." A phrase is simple a group of words without both a noun or finite verb. In your example, "novel" is the subject, and "provides" the active verb, with "entertainment" the object of the sentence. A gerund is a verb used as a noun, often used as the subject of a sentence. (example: Cooking is my best skill.) In your sentence, "novel" is a word that means a book of fiction. It's a "naming word" a definition of a noun. The word "novel" is one of the English words that have a variety of meanings depending on context. It can be used as an adjective ("She had a novel idea..." meaning an unusual idea, not a book idea lol)
Yes the idea or meaning is associated with a word and it is called its definition.
mondegreen
Out of
an association or idea suggested by a word or phrase; implication
euphemism
study island answer: euphemism
The word "repetición" in Spanish expresses the idea of repetition.
It can also be used as a counterpart to attributive
i have know idea at all
"Central" functions as an adjective, describing the type of idea. "Idea" is a noun, which is the main subject of the phrase. Together, "central idea" forms a noun phrase.
A phrase is never a part of speech, only a word.
The word could be crux, focus, essence, or core.
An idea or plan put forward for consideration.
How come is often used instead of why.
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun phrase 'the idea' is it.Example: The idea is a good one. Did you think of it yourself?
A euphemism is a word or phrase that is used in place of one that is negative or unsavory. For example, "passed away" is used as a euphemism for "died".