Horse Isle: 2 under par is an eagle.
The Latin translation of the English phrase 'Courage under adversity' is the following: Fortitudo in asperitate. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'fortitudo' means 'moral and physical courage'; 'in' means 'in'; and 'asperitate' means 'difficulties'. The Latin phrase 'ad astram per aspera' is translated into English as 'to the stars through difficulties'. The use of the preposition 'per' implies that the difficulties aren't all there yet. But the preposition 'in' does, and thereby meets the standard of 'under'.
Sometimes, but not always (Just like english). For example. "Quiero estar contigo" (I want to be with you) has "estar" before the prepositional phrase ("contigo": With you). But with "Hay un gato debajo de la mesa" (There is a cat under the table), the prepositional phrase ("debajo de": under the) is not preceded by any form of "estar".
il est sous le charme / se trouver sous le charmecharme could be either a spell, or a tree (Carpinus betulus = European hornbeam) that phrase will be in most occurences, understood as 'to be under a spell'
A Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'under duress' may be sub coercitione inlicite. In the word-by-word translation, the preposition 'sub' means 'under'. The noun 'coercitione' means 'a confining, a restraint'. The adjective 'inlicite' means 'illegal, not allowed'.
Unfortunately the translation of the phrase chinga tu madre is a phrase that should not be used. This is a phrase that is of an adult nature only and contains very foul language not suitable for anyone under the age of 18.
20,000 leages under the sea
Warships "missing and presumed lost" are normally meant to mean sunk. Under this catch all phrase, WW2 warships are accounted for.
work it out for yourself- but is use more like well.I means "think about it" go figure!Go figure, the answer was right under my nose the entire time.
The prepositional phrase in the sentence is "under the covered bridge."
The prepositional phrase is "under the couch".
mordred's missing journal is in his study. his missing page is under his bed.
Noun phrase: I, the doll Verb phrase: hid Prepositional phrase: under the banana pelts
"under any circumstance" is the prepositional phrase.
Yes, the sentence "Trolls live under bridges elves do not" contains a prepositional phrase. The phrase "under bridges" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
The prepositional phrase in that sentence is "under the car".
No, a prepositional phrase does not begin with a verb. It typically starts with a preposition (e.g., in, on, under) followed by a noun or pronoun to show the relationship between the noun and other parts of the sentence.
There is a phrase above. It says "All that is was and forever will be".