"of houses"
"of houses" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
of houses
If it is a single house, then the sentence is incorrect. If house is singular, the apostrophe should go before the s, with the sentence reading "The house's furniture was simple." The way the sentence reads now, it suggests plural houses.
The girl finally realized that she can't possess people with her money. =)The millionaire possessed 5 houses.
One sentence that the words "vis-à-vis" could be used in is "Les maisons sont en vis-à-vis." This means "The houses face each other."
"House" is typically considered singular. When used in a sentence, we say "This house is big," not "This house are big."
Yes, it is correct to say "the noblemen's houses" to refer to the houses belonging to noblemen. The possessive form "noblemen's" indicates that the houses belong to more than one nobleman.
The prepositional phrase is "roofs of houses."
of houses
On its own, tornado is simply a noun. As with any noun, whether it is the subject or the object depends on how it is used in the sentence. In this sentence, "tornado" is the subject while "houses" is the object: "The tornado destroyed several houses." In this one, "tornadoes" is the object: "I saw a tornado."
Example: A tornado can knock over houses and spoil towns and villages.
Tornadoes rip and destroy everything in their path. There are lots of destructive things that can be expected from a Tornado and some of them is: * Land Damage * House Damage * Trees uprooted And if the Tornado is an F4-F5 then it could flip and rip houses of of their roots. Most of the destructive things that are common is lots of damage to things that have been affected by the Tornado.
A tornado with estimated winds of 111-135 mph. Damage includes: Roofs torn off frame houses; mobile homes demolished; boxcars overturned; large trees snapped or uprooted; light-object missiles generated; cars lifted off ground.
Typical tornado damage includes snapped trees, material peeled from roofs, and some weak structures badly damaged. Typical damage from an intense tornado includes large numbers of trees snapped or uprooted, houses partially or completely destroyed, and weak structures completely torn apart or blown away.
In an F2 tornadoes, houses will often lose their roofs, but most walls will remain standing. Weaker structures such as barns and trailer homes may be completely destroyed. Large trees are often snapped or uprooted.
It usually takes at least an F4 tornado to flatten houses.
many houses no food because of cutting trees.
No. It was once believed that the low pressure inside a tornado would cause houses to explode, but this notion was disproven by the 1990s. It is the wind and debris in a tornado that destroys houses, not the low pressure.
A tornado wrecks things and sometimes tears down houses.