We were lost, hungry and running short of water. Suddenly the solution came to me, like a bolt out of the blue. We could use the parts from the RV to build an emergency beacon.
i was bolt from the blue when i was not passed in the exam
im a true-blue
The blue jay was hidden in the tree's foliage.
Bear in mind that a sentence fragment is not a sentence, so your question is itself not correctly phrased. "The canoe with the blue stripes" is a sentence fragment, a noun phrase with no verb. The phrase is the subject or the object of a sentence, but it isn't a sentence. Samples of the completed sentence with the subject and the verb in bold:Subject: The canoe with the blue stripesis Mr. Jones' canoe.Object of the verb: I rentedthe canoe with the blue stripes.Object of a preposition: I saw him in the canoe with the blue stripes.
the water is blue. i like blue colour. the sky is blue
The blue birds flew south for the winter.
No, "blue leather shoes" is a noun phrase as it functions as the subject or object in a sentence. An adverbial phrase typically modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb to provide more information about the action or situation.
The phrase 'bolt from the blue' refers to a unexpected happening, or a surprise. Therefore, a sentence could be: When a man I had never seen before turned up at my house claiming he was my father, it was a bolt from the blue.
The blue mist covered the air near the waterfall.
Wild Blue has a stingy bandwidth policy.
'Blue circle' could be a sentence but it is unlikely. A dolphin named BLUE could be asked to circle, thus a noun and verb. The more likely use of 'blue circle' is an adjective and noun. 'Look at the blue circle he drew on the page.'
subject = you verb phrase = have ... noticed