An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.
The appositive phrase is an Old English sheepdog which renames the noun 'Rufus'.
5 years
He is Philip Malloy's friend and training partner, who gets involved with Philip's English teacher problem, and helps him.
Susanna English was actually a real person, and so were her parents. Her, Mary English (her sister) and William English (her brother) were actually the children of Philip and Mary English. Susanna's family were involved in the witch trials, but she did not do all the things that the book said she did.
Miss Narwin is a english teacher at Harrison High School and is also Philip's homeroom teacher and english teacher
Philip and Joe are busy ( it can also mean worrying) but busy is the best form
A: Philip Dormer Stanhope, the fourth earl of Chesterfield. The Chesterfield coat and sofa are named for him.
The cast of This is Me Walking - 2004 includes: Neil Hidalgo Harris Philip as Harris
The cast of Sheepdog of the Hills - 1941 includes: Arthur Denton as Hawkins David Farrar as Rev. Michael Verney Philip Friend as Dr. Peter Hammond Philip Godfrey as Sam Worrow Helen Perry as Frances Miller Johnnie Schofield as Tom Abbott Leonard Sharp as Geordie Scott Jack Vyvian as Constable Scott Dennis Wyndham as Riggy Teasdale
Philip O'Flaherty has written: 'Collections for a lexicon in Luganda and English and English and Luganda' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, Ganda language
Philip Axelrad has written: 'Complete Roumanian-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Romanian language, Dictionaries, English
Philip Lea has written: 'London almanack for XXX years' -- subject(s): Almanacs, English, English Almanacs, Ephemerides
Frederick Philip Mayer has written: 'Victorian prose' -- subject(s): English essays, English prose literature
Philip Parker Gilbert has written: 'The excellency of the English liturgy'
Metacomet
English
Cormic Philip Deasy has written: 'St. Joseph in the English mystery plays' -- subject(s): History and criticism, English drama, Mysteries and miracle-plays, English
Philip Edgcumbe Hughes has written: 'Theology of the English reformers' 'Scripture and myth'
in April 1205.