"In the pool" is the prepositional phrase.
"in the pool" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence "Roberto swam laps in the pool."
The homophone for lapse is laps.
Laps - Lapse
Lapse is a homophone for laps.
The punctuation error is that there should be a comma after "morning." It should read: "on a bright, crisp morning, Kyle can be found lifting weights, running laps, and doing sit-ups."
A pronoun is a word that can replace a noun in a sentence. It helps avoid repetitive use of the noun and makes sentences more concise. For example, instead of saying "John went to the store," you could say "He went to the store," where "He" is the pronoun that replaces the noun "John."
The string "Cats unlike dogs and fond of sitting on laps" is not a sentence. Perhaps you meant, "Cats, unlike dogs, are fond of sitting on laps."? That is a sentence. Possibly not a truesentence, but at least it's a sentence. The commas and period are mandatory and cannot be left out. Likewise, the word "are" cannot be replaced by the word "and".As to what "kind" of sentence that is, I'd say it's a sentence with an adjectival phrase ("unlike dogs") modifying it's subject ("cats"). Similar to: "Halibut, like flounder, is a bottom-feeding fish."
"Depresser of laps" is not a commonly used phrase in English. It likely refers to something that causes a decrease or lowering in a specific setting or context, but without more information, it is difficult to provide a more specific interpretation.
swam
We were very tired after we had made 5 laps of the pitch.
He was panting after finishing 10 laps during P.E.
Try not to expend all of your energy during the early laps [of a race].
The fittest child ran ten laps around the track before he became tired.
The homophone for lapse is laps.
Laps - 2011 Re-Laps - 2.1 was released on: USA: 2014
swimmed is the incorrect word. the correct term is swam
Laps - Lapse
Laps - 2011 Re-Laps 2-1 was released on: USA: 2014