Water.
Water.
Une phrase (fem.)
No. "To water" is an infinitive, not a preposition.
Which phrase defines the time called prehistory
The verb phrase of the flow around the comet's nucleus is called its coma. Is is a form of be, and called is also a verb on its own. The phrase is called is a verb phrase.
The phrase is called a parenthetical phrase when it is enclosed in parentheses. It is used to provide additional information that is not essential to the main clause.
A word or phrase defined in a dictionary is called an entry.
"To water the earth" is an infinitive phrase. It begins with the infinitive verb "to water" and acts as a noun within a sentence. This phrase expresses the action of providing water to the earth, typically in the context of agriculture or environmental care.
When prepositional phrases modify verbs it is called an adverbial phrase. It is the same whether it modifies a verb, adverb, or adjective.
I spilled my water.
The resting place at the end of a phrase is called a cadence. The distance between different pitches is called an interval.
"to water the earth" is a verbal phrase- more precisely an infinitive phrase. It could be expressed as "to irrigate"