The correct word to fill in the sentence is "burst." "The children burst into peals of laughter" is the correct form of the sentence.
Sure! A partial phrase is a group of words that does not form a complete sentence on its own. For example, "in the morning" is a partial phrase because it lacks a subject and verb to make it a complete sentence.
The underlined words in a sentence can be a noun phrase, verb phrase, prepositional phrase, or any other type of phrase that functions as a unit within a sentence.
"without me" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
The gerund phrase in the sentence is "Planning to succeed." This phrase functions as the subject of the sentence.
Recently, an oil pipeline burst.
The correct word to fill in the sentence is "burst." "The children burst into peals of laughter" is the correct form of the sentence.
Try a sentence with the phrase "capitol city"
Mike burst through the unpainted door.
yes (alternative answer) "cachet integrity" is not a sentence, it is a phrase, and the meaning of that phrase is not particularly clear, either.
I was caught napping.
and he burst into laughter?sam fell over then john immediately burst into laughter?
a sentence phrase is a"sentence "that funtions as a phrase in the sentence. For example: I'm tired of his saying " I'm out of money".
"Jump on the bandwagon" IS a sentence.
Once in a while, severe Alzheimer's patients have bursts of cogent thought.
"to the movies" is a prepositional phrase.
I could answer that question if you were to phrase it a bit differently. They were to arrive hours ago.