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the English class has half as many students as he math class
A variable expression.
Plural is more than singular. Singular is only one and plural means more than one.
Yes there can be more then one outlier
One line can have only one slope. It is possible to draw more than one line on a single graph, however.
Since "area" is not a verb, "to area" cannot be an infinitive phrase, or even just an infinitive. "To area" could be a prepositional phrase but it does not appear to have any meaning by itself. One might say "to the area" but never simply "to area."
The infinitive phrase is to raise awareness of the growing landfill problem.
'when more than one are' is the correct phrase.
No. Into is a word. It is a preposition. A phrase is more than one word, so a prepositional phrase will have more than one word eg into the woods.
No. One or the other is correct. We use can plus the infinitive without to: I can do that. But we use ablewith the copula verb ( to be, for example) and the infinitive with to. I am able to do that.
if a phrase begins with "to" then it is an infinitive. an infinitive is a verbal. they may be used as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs. an infinitive is formed by adding "to". an infinitive phrase consists of an infinitive, its modifiers, and its complements. let me give you an example or two... 'My son is doing exercises to strengthen his ankle.' the infinitive phrase is" TO strengthen his ankle. it's an adjective modifying exercises because if you take out the infinitive phrase, the sentence still makes sense. it is giving you additional information about the exercise...ill give u one more example. "to begin the journey is often the hardest step." the phrase is to begin the journey. its a noun- subject. remember- nouns don't modify anything...not even "step" i really hoped i helped---im only 14 years old....but u can trust me. I'm pretty good at this. wait until you learn gerunds! good luck :)
"to watch" Hence a slit infinitive is when someone inserts an adverb between the "to" and its verb. The Star Trek saying " To boldly go when no one ......." is a split infinitive; the infinitive should be "to go" not "to boldly" - Correctly phrased the Star Trek saying should read: "Boldly to go where no one...." This is very good info, but if you are on A+ the complete infinitive phrase would be "to watch two movies in a row".
"To know how to do" is one English equivalent of the French phrase savoir faire.Specifically, the infinitive savoir means "to know, to know how." The infinitive faire means "to do, to make." The pronunciation will be "sah-vwahr fehr" in French.
The possessive form is more than one month's.Example: I have more than one month's salary in my savings account.
A prepositional phrase contains more than one word and is introduce by a preposition, which your is not.
No. A verb phrase has more than one word eg has been eaten.Are is a be verb
Yes, a prepositional phrase consists of a preposition and its object. The object can be a noun, pronoun, or gerund.