yes but
They Didnt Retire Them There Still Running
"The children were running to the bus stop." The verb phrase is "were running."
Snow Hill school bus collision happened on 1985-05-31.
In this sentence, "were running" is the verb phrase, in the past continuous tense.
No, "bus to school" is not a verb phrase; it is a noun phrase with "bus" as the noun and "to school" functioning as a prepositional phrase that indicates the destination. A verb phrase typically consists of a main verb along with its auxiliaries or modifiers, such as "is going" or "has been running." In this case, the action of the bus is not expressed within the phrase itself.
the chioldren were running
This is a tradition that will never get old. In fact there was a couple doing a mallu in the bus just last week. It is a great way for his/her partner to be reminded that they are special.
To Get To School In The Snow u Have To Get Bundled Up And Walk To School Or Get a Drive By Your Parents Or Take A Bus If Its Not Cancelled
Momentum. Momentum is mass x velocity. Velocity is speed in a direction. Even if the bus changes direction, you still have momentum in the original direction until some force pushes you in another direction. That takes a moment in a car or bus, so until your momentum is that of the bus, you'll still be going in a slightly different direction, which happens to seem 'outwards'.
Bharat - Pakistan
NO
it goes to the city