He was not prepared for what he saw.
We are prepared for our road trip.
He was prepared to cross the river.
prepared
In the sentence "We are prepared for whatever may happen," the noun clause is "whatever may happen." This clause functions as the object of the preposition "for," indicating what the subject is prepared for.
Yes. It's not a complete sentence. You must say what was prepared. But that is correct phrasing. Paperwork was prepared for this transaction. I was prepared for his resignation. Dinner was prepared by the children. Was the package prepared for shipping? The report was not prepared on time.
I wasn't prepared for this quandary...
In the sentence "We are prepared for whatever may happen," the noun clause is "whatever may happen." This clause acts as the object of the preposition "for," indicating the specific situation or event for which the subject is prepared.
Example sentence - I was not prepared to speak on sociodemographics when the professor asked me to during the class.
The children savoured the food that was prepared by the male chef.
The appositive phrase in the sentence "my father prepared his favorite entree" is "his favorite entree." An appositive typically provides additional information about a noun, and in this case, it describes what kind of entree the father prepared. However, there is no distinct appositive structure in this sentence as it stands; it simply describes an action.
"For my audition for the play, I prepared a monologue."
the meal that she prepared was quite nutritious and tasty.
The chassis part of the car was prepared first. This is a sentence which contains the word chassis.