alliteration
You use a when its before a word that starts with a consonant and use an when its before a word that starts with a vowel
The prepositional phrase is from the zoo.
"in our house" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence. It starts with the preposition "in" and includes the object "house".
no. "s" is a consonant so "clothes" starts with a consonant and ends with a consonant
A prepositional phrase is when the phrase starts with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun. Therefore the prepositional phrase in 'A chicken has a comb on its head?' is 'on its head'.
a prepositional phrase which starts a sentence: After the fair we went home.
No, and inverted triangle paragraph starts with the topic sentence. A triangle paragraph starts with the least important phrase and ends with the topic sentence.
During the recital is the prepositional phrase. It starts with a preposition and ends with a noun> Those are the rules!
The infinitive phrase is "to join the circus" (an adverbial phrase).
"Folktale" starts with the consonant "f" and ends with the vowel "e."
"In many places" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence. It starts with the preposition "in" and includes the object "places."
The participial phrase in this sentence is "Switching their tails." It acts as an adjective to describe the horses and starts with the present participle "switching."