When you carry a credit card, it's far too easy to give in to temptation.
The length of his sentence is in question. A complete sentence is better than a fragment or a phrase.
I deduce from the given evidence
Some parrots can repeat an entire sentence
The prepositional phrase will be italicized. After the concert, we all went out for ice cream.
The sunrise lit up the sky only slowly, painting it in pastel hues as dawn broke.
Let's try to give off pleasant vibrations.
After causing a minor disruption in class, the student received only a slap on the wrist from the teacher.
Yes. A prepositional phrase in its simplest form is a preposition followed by a noun or pronoun.
Heads up, the meeting has been rescheduled to tomorrow morning.
I can give you several sentences.That phrase makes no sense to me.An idiom is a phrase that doesn't mean what it seems to mean.He copied the phrase into his notebook.
To use the phrase "turn turtle" is nasty
A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun. Can you please provide the sentence you are referring to so I can identify the prepositional phrase within it?