Yes!
No. It is an adverb phrase that answers the question where.
No. "To water" is an infinitive, not a preposition.
The barium nitrate phrase is R20/22.
Assuming that you mean phase of matter and not phrase of matter (which is a meaningless phrase), one possible answer is a Bose-Einstein condensate.
Terra firmaåÊis a Latin phrase meaning "solid earth" (fromåÊterraåÊ"earth" andåÊfirmaåÊ"solid"). The phrase refers to the dryåÊland massåÊon the earth's surface and is used to differentiate from the sea or air.
The phrase "the moon is a balloon" is an example of a direct metaphor. A direct metaphor is a direct comparison of two things.
yes
yea
the book itself? or the phrase "slippery slope"? the phrase is not
Yes, the phrase "on the ground" is a prepositional phrase in the sentence "Sally sat on the ground."
metephor
The phrase his anger is a gale force is an example of a metaphor.
The phrase his anger is a gale force is an example of a metaphor.
Metaphor. This phrase is a metaphor that suggests the person is arrogant or conceited, comparing their apparent inflated ego to an actual physical swelling of the head.
no
Neither
Metaphor