A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun. It provides more information about the relationship between other words in a sentence. Examples of prepositional phrases include "at the park" or "in the morning."
"Go to the store for me." is an imperative sentence with a prepositional phrase. "to the store" is the prepositional phrase.
The sentence "because of her glittering smile" is a clause, not a phrase, because it contains a subject ("her") and a verb ("smile").
She decided to go for a run to clear her mind.
No, a prepositional phrase is not a complete sentence because it does not contain a subject and a verb. It is a group of words that begins with a preposition and provides additional information about the subject or object in a sentence.
A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun. It provides more information about the relationship between other words in a sentence. Examples of prepositional phrases include "at the park" or "in the morning."
Your question is a sentence and contains the phrase "feature article." (The above is another example of using the phrase in a sentence.)
Appositive phrase
Appositive phrase
"Go to the store for me." is an imperative sentence with a prepositional phrase. "to the store" is the prepositional phrase.
The sentence "because of her glittering smile" is a clause, not a phrase, because it contains a subject ("her") and a verb ("smile").
She decided to go for a run to clear her mind.
Be it from mathemtica or any where else, a sentence contains a 'VERB' a phrse does NOT contain a verb.
"At the least cathartic." is not a sentence. A sentence must contain a subject (noun) and a verb. The given phrase contains neither.
No, a prepositional phrase is not a complete sentence because it does not contain a subject and a verb. It is a group of words that begins with a preposition and provides additional information about the subject or object in a sentence.
Yes, the sentence "Trolls live under bridges elves do not" contains a prepositional phrase. The phrase "under bridges" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
Well this would depend on what type of adjective phrase you are talking about. There are three different types of adjective phrases:Head-final adjective phrase - This contains an adverb and then an adjectiveHead-initial adjective phrase - This contains an adjective followed by a preposition and a noun.Head-medial adjective phrase - This contains an adverb followed by an adjective, preposition, and then a noun