of the people
of the people
No, but it can have the meaning of an entire sentence.
yes, "With the proper help" is a prepositional phrase. :)
No, because it does not have a subject and verb. For example, "under the mat" is a prepositional phrase, but it is not a sentence. An example of a sentence that contains a prepositional phrase is "The key is under the mat."
You live in the city is a complete sentence. The prepositional phrase is in the city. You is the subject, and live is the verb. They are not part of the prepositional phrase.
Yes, "from" is a preposition commonly used to indicate the source or starting point of something. It is part of the prepositional phrase that provides additional information about the location or origin of an action.
I'm not sure if your question is whether a prepositional phrase is the same thing as a word group, or if "group" is a prepositional phrase. The answer is no in either case. A word group must express a complete thought. A prepositional phrase is part of a sentence and it has to start with a preposition. "In the group" is a prepositional phrase beginning with the preposition "in."
For justice.
a clause has a subject and a verb and may or may not complete a though (depended on a subordinate clause or independent). A prepositional phrase has a preposition and the object of the preposition
In Iowa and Tennessee.
The correct pronoun to complete the sentence is me.The objective pronoun 'me' will complete the compound object of the preposition 'for you and me'.Other options to complete the prepositional phrase are 'for you and her' and for you and him. The pronouns 'her' and 'him' are also objective pronouns.
2 OR 3 BECAUSE A PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE HELPS YOU COMPLETE the sentence and makes it sound real spicyALSO IT MAKES IT BETTER sounding.