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"The children were running to the bus stop." The verb phrase is "were running."
In this sentence, "were running" is the verb phrase, in the past continuous tense.
the chioldren were running
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "ran to the bus stop after the movie".The subject is the noun phrase "the children".Note: The preposition phrase "After the movie" modifies the verb "ran".
5 , 4 Children & the Bus Driver
Yes, you should stop.
You're supposed to stop for a school bus which is loading or unloading children, unless the bus is on the opposite side of a divided highway (and even some states require you to stop for that).
a bus stop kid is; the children on TV while the temps and weather conditions are given. they are dressed accordingly to the weather predictions
The "King of the Road" is a school bus with the red flashers on! Even running lights and sirens, emergency responders will stop and shut down the siren for children crossing the road.
You should stop. This is for the safety of the children getting off the bus.
If the median is paved you stop either direction. Grass median, only stop if behind the bus.
what is the height of the bus stop