Yes, "in time" is an adverbial prepositional phrase.
Yes, "for the first time" is a prepositional phrase that provides information about the time something occurs. It acts as an adverbial phrase in a sentence.
"At that time" is the prepositional phrase.
"At that time" is the prepositional phrase.
Yes, it is a phrase that indicates time. It will be an adverbial phrase.
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Yes, "in an environment" is a prepositional phrase. It begins with the preposition "in" and includes the noun phrase "an environment." Prepositional phrases provide more information about location or time.
The prepositional phrase is in the park. Camping is not part of the prepositional phrase.
A prepositional phrase that modifies a noun or pronoun is an adjective prepositional phrase. An adjective prepositional phrase almost always follows the noun/pronoun it modifies.
with such force is a prepositional phrase.
An introductory prepositional phrase is a prepositional phrase that appears at the beginning of a sentence before the subject. It provides additional information about the time, location, or manner of the action in the sentence. Example: "In the morning, I like to go for a run."
Yes. It is a prepositional phrase, used as an adverb.
Some common prepositional phrases are the following: at home on time by Monday with John and Sally in the morning over the weekend from time to time