An adjectival phrase is a group of words describing a noun e.g ball so you could say a
red
round
bouncy
multicolored
small
Rugby ball
burst ball
Hope this helps
An adjectival phrase, also known as an adjective phrase, is a phrase which modifies or describes a noun or pronoun and which can be usually used both attributively and predicatively.
An adjectival phrase is a group of words that function as an adjective in a sentence, providing more information about a noun or pronoun. It typically consists of an adjective (or more than one) and any modifiers that come before or after it. Example: "very happy with her new job."
the adverbial phrase and adjectival phrase
It could be either an adjectival phrase or an adverbial phrase, depending on whether the phrase modifies a noun or a verb. Lets start with a simple sentence: "The boy threw the ball." That doesn't tell us very much. It doesn't tell us which boy threw the ball or where he threw it. So now let's add the phrase "in the classroom." Let's say, for example, "The boy in the classroom threw the ball." Here the phrase modifies the noun 'boy.' It tells us which boy, and is therefore an adjectival phrase. But, "The boy threw the ball in the classroom," is different because the phrase modifies the verb 'threw' by telling us where the ball was thrown. Therefore it is an adverbial phrase.
Adjectival phrase
Both are same
1. noun phrase 2. adjectival phrase 3. adverbial phrase 4. verbal phrase
noun phrase, adverbial phrase, adjectival phrase
"In the hand" is a prepositional phrase ("in" being a preposition and "hand" being the object of the preposition.)
A prepositional phrase is adjectival if it describes a noun or pronoun by answering questions such as "which one" or "what kind." It is adverbial if it modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb by answering questions such as "where," "when," or "how."
The adverb in the phrase "a tiny piece of garlic" is "tiny," as it describes the size of the piece of garlic.
The adjective that means "horse-like" or "having the properties of a horse" is "equine".