I want to hire you because I am very impressed by the manner in which your team roofs a house.
Those three houses have different types of roofs.
Roofs are very fun to sit on, but no fun to fall off of.
The prepositional phrase in the sentence is "of houses." It indicates a relationship between the roofs and the houses they belong to. The phrase helps clarify which roofs are being referred to in the context of the tornado's impact.
My crew completed three roofs today. I'll be watching the new guy to see how well he roofs. That could only be 'roofs', actually. See the definition at the Related Link listed below:
Many houses were, and sometimes still are, built with thatch roofs.
To change the sentence "All houses have roofs" into a singular form, you can rephrase it as "A house has a roof." This shifts the focus from multiple houses to just one house, while also changing the verb form accordingly.
The prepositional phrase in the sentence is "of houses." A prepositional phrase includes a preposition (in this case, "of") and its object (houses). This phrase functions as an adjective, providing more information about the roofs that were blown away.
Slanted roofs don't accumulate water during storms.
"On the eaves of some New England roofs are the eaves troughs, also known as rain gutters."
Roofs
The three main types of roofs are flat roofs, pitched roofs, and mansard roofs. Flat roofs have a slight pitch for water drainage, pitched roofs have a steep slope, and mansard roofs have two slopes on all sides with the lower slope being steeper than the upper slope.
yes there were roofs on castles
Wooden features were replaced with stone while roofs, now considered unseemly, were hidden behind a stone parapet.