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The verb phrase in the sentence "That dog will eat everything you set in front of it" is will eat.
The verb phrase in the sentence "That dog will eat everything you set in front of it" is will eat.
The verb phrase in the sentence "That dog will eat everything you set in front of it" is will eat.
The verb phrase in the sentence "That dog will eat everything you set in front of it" is will eat.
The verb phrase in the sentence "That dog will eat everything you set in front of it" is will eat.
will not
When a "helping verb" modifies the main verb of a sentence, the helping verb(s) and the main verb make up the verb phrase.Examples:The dog will run.It should have worked.
Yes, the noun 'dog' is the indirect object of the verb gave.The direct object of the verb 'gave' is the noun phrase 'dish of water'.
A phrasal verb is an action phrase, but a phrase is like a little title that gets used in sentences sometimes.A phrase is two or more words:verb phrase - are walkingnoun phrase - the black dogpreposition phrase - at lunchA phrasal verb is a verb plus another word (or sometimes two) that acts like a single verb in a sentence:look out - Look out, here comes the dog!pick up - I picked up Spanish when I lived in Madrid - past tenseblow up - The troops blew up the bridge. - past tensePhrasal verbs have tense.
subject = dog present progressive = is walking adverb = slowly prepositional phrase = along the road. The dog is walking slowly along the road
will + verb is future tenseThe rapture will occur in the future.We will go to the beach tomorrow.The dog will eat his food when we have gone.
Adjectives aren't used in front of verbs.Adjectives are used to describe nouns and they go in front of the noun. egadjective = black, noun = dog. The black dog bit my hand.Adverbs are associated with verbs. They add information about verbs. egadverb = always, verb = get. I always get the bus to work.