Sure! Here's an example of a participial phrase: "Rushing to finish her homework, Sarah accidentally dropped her pencil." The participial phrase is "rushing to finish her homework."
"Running at top speed, the athlete crossed the finish line." "Eager to learn more, the student asked insightful questions." "Feeling exhausted after the long day, she took a nap."
Sure! An example of a prepositional phrase is "on the table." In this phrase, "on" is the preposition that shows the relationship between the object "table" and the rest of the sentence.
Sure! A partial phrase is a group of words that does not form a complete sentence on its own. For example, "in the morning" is a partial phrase because it lacks a subject and verb to make it a complete sentence.
An example of a split infinitive is: "to boldly go." In this phrase, "boldly" splits the infinitive "to go."
No, "announced next week" is not a gerund phrase. A gerund phrase consists of a gerund (a verb ending in -ing used as a noun) and its modifiers. In this case, "announced" is a verb acting in the past participle form, not a gerund.
a participal phrase is this
"sleeping in the corner" is the participal phrase
"sleeping in the corner" is the participal phrase
Protected by an umbrella A+
yes... "winding" is a *participle*... not a "participal"...
"Running at top speed, the athlete crossed the finish line." "Eager to learn more, the student asked insightful questions." "Feeling exhausted after the long day, she took a nap."
The word virus is a noun. The plural form is viruses.
had
Sure! An example of a prepositional phrase is "on the table." In this phrase, "on" is the preposition that shows the relationship between the object "table" and the rest of the sentence.
Stupid is as stupid does. - Forrest Gump
Sure! A partial phrase is a group of words that does not form a complete sentence on its own. For example, "in the morning" is a partial phrase because it lacks a subject and verb to make it a complete sentence.
An example of a split infinitive is: "to boldly go." In this phrase, "boldly" splits the infinitive "to go."