The activity or state of being in a sentence is expressed by a verb. Depending on the present time, verbs can be represented in a variety of tenses.
<h3>What is subject and verb?</h3>
The person or thing about whom the assertion is made, in this case John, is called the subject in a simple English phrase such as John runs, John is a teacher, or John got ran over by a car. Traditionally, the verb in a clause is controlled by a word or phrase known as the subject, with which the verb agrees.
The activity or state of being in a sentence is expressed by a verb. Depending on the present time, verbs can be represented in a variety of tenses. Here are a few instances: Example: Jennifer strolled over to the shop. The verb in this sentence that denotes an action is walked.
A phrase is made up of a group of words that are combined to signify something. The fundamental building block of language, a phrase conveys a full notion. It achieves this by adhering to the syntax's fundamental grammatical norms. For instance, "Ali is walking."
The complete question is,
A complete sentence must have a subject, verb and be a complete thought. T/F
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Hi there! The answer should be : D. " texting while driving is a blindfold". Texting while driving is not a literal blindfold, however it is a huge distraction and danger similar to driving with a blind fold. ( it makes you less aware of your surroundings. ) I hope this helps! Have a great day! : )
Different- mount olympus is in nyc at the top of the empire state building (an actual place in the human world) & above the world (very top floor that does not really exists to humans); underworld is a place that non humans never see/know of & it's under the world
First of all, it is important to define preposition phrase in order to find it in this sentence. We can say that "<span>a prepositional phrase will begin with a </span>preposition<span> and will end with a </span>noun<span>, </span>pronoun<span>, </span>gerund<span>, or </span>clause<span>, the "object" of the preposition"
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*In this case, we find UNTIL TODAY as the only prepositional phrase presented. until is the preposition and today is the noun.