It is "who was sitting close to them".
An example of a prepositional phrase is "in the morning." This phrase consists of the preposition "in" and the noun "morning," and it functions as an adjective or adverb in a sentence.
The job of an adjective is to modify (describe) a noun or a pronoun. So, the only time you will use an adjective is when you are giving more information about the noun(s) or pronoun(s) in a sentence. For example: The handsome man sitting on the bench is my husband. The subject of the sentence is "man" and it's a noun too. What kind of man? A handsome man. "Handsome" describes the noun. Or how about this one: She is a very intelligent student. "Student" is a noun, and "intelligent" is an adjective, describing what kind of student she is.
Yes. With a sentence like: Sitting in his chair, Matthew felt very tired. Sitting down all day gets boring. Sitting in her throne, the queen surveyed the assembly before her.
No, "sitting" is not a preposition. It is a gerund form of the verb "sit" and functions as a noun in a sentence.
In the sentence "Martha is sitting next to Keith," "next" is not functioning as a preposition. It is an adverb modifying the verb "sitting" to specify the location of Martha in relation to Keith.
adjective is the words that describe a noun or a pronoun, and an example of an adjective is beautiful ex sentence The beautiful girl is sitting next to me.
Yes, I can. Can you? Or did you mean, "can one make a sentence about sitting?"
Adjective: A word that describes a noun example: non-adj.: a dog w/adjective: a beautiful dog Verb: a doing word or a word that adds action to the sentence or assigns a noun an action Eg: the dog was sitting, the man was eating
Senator Jake Garn was the first sitting member of the US congress to go into space.
Sit is a verb, not an adjectiv, with past tense and past participle of "sat"sitting is an adjective form ( called a present participle)Sitting can also also a noun form (called a gerund).Never bother a sitting dog. (used as an adjective)We ate lunch in the second sitting today. (used as a noun)I have a sitting with the artist who is painting my portrait at 9:00am. (used as a noun)
he is sitting on thebench in a gardenwhy is he?
An example of a prepositional phrase is "in the morning." This phrase consists of the preposition "in" and the noun "morning," and it functions as an adjective or adverb in a sentence.
She was sitting on a red chair.He is sitting on the green mat.My friend was sitting on the coach watching tv.
she is not comfortable sitting by you...
her son Curran anddaughter Caroline
The job of an adjective is to modify (describe) a noun or a pronoun. So, the only time you will use an adjective is when you are giving more information about the noun(s) or pronoun(s) in a sentence. For example: The handsome man sitting on the bench is my husband. The subject of the sentence is "man" and it's a noun too. What kind of man? A handsome man. "Handsome" describes the noun. Or how about this one: She is a very intelligent student. "Student" is a noun, and "intelligent" is an adjective, describing what kind of student she is.
Robert "Bobby" Kennedy was shot by Sirhan Sirhan as a sitting Senator while trying to secure the Democratic nomination for President.