I haven't seen my cousin Phillip for many years and today I ran into him on a street corner.
The phrase "ran to catch the bus" contains no subject.Examples of complete sentences:He ran to catch the bus.Mrs. Jones ran to catch the bus.The kids ran to catch the bus.All sentences need:a subject (this is a person place or thing that does the actiona verb (an action)The original phrase does not say who or what did the running.
2 or 3 words that are the subject of the sentence: Jack and his dog ran through the woods. - Jack and his dog = subject phrase Jack ran through the woods. - Jack = single pronoun subject.
Try a sentence with the phrase "capitol city"
the clock ran anticlockwise
It depends what sentence you are using it in. If it is future tense, then it will be run. If it is past tense, then it will be ran.
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "ran to the bus stop after the movie".The subject is the noun phrase "the children".Note: The preposition phrase "After the movie" modifies the verb "ran".
Yes, a prepositional phrase can function as an adverb phrase in a sentence. It provides information about where, when, how, or to what extent an action is taking place. For example, in the sentence "She ran to the store quickly," the prepositional phrase "to the store" acts as an adverbial phrase describing where she ran.
"up the hill"
The phrase "ran to catch the bus" contains no subject.Examples of complete sentences:He ran to catch the bus.Mrs. Jones ran to catch the bus.The kids ran to catch the bus.All sentences need:a subject (this is a person place or thing that does the actiona verb (an action)The original phrase does not say who or what did the running.
The prepositional phrase in this sentence is "with the yellow hair," which modifies the noun "boy."
I would say "returned" as it means your doing something, get it? "The dog ran quickly to claim his prize" The adverb phrase would either be, 1: Ran quickly 2: Ran 3: Quickly whatever the question is asking.
The dog, chasing its tail, ran around the yard. The participial phrase is "chasing its tail."
The dog ran quickly through the park.
The infinitive phrase is "to join the circus" (an adverbial phrase).
It takes the place of a noun. In the sentence "The cat ran", the pronoun "it" can be used to replace "the cat" to make the sentence "It ran."
2 or 3 words that are the subject of the sentence: Jack and his dog ran through the woods. - Jack and his dog = subject phrase Jack ran through the woods. - Jack = single pronoun subject.
One sentence is "A gent, I ran."