Adjective
of Bob
"Through the fog" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence. It acts as an adverbial phrase, providing more information about how little could be seen.
The words "on the table" are a prepositional phrase. It could be either an adjective or an adverb phrase. adjective - The book on the table is very old. (modifies book) adverb - He left the book on the table. (modifies left)
Since "area" is not a verb, "to area" cannot be an infinitive phrase, or even just an infinitive. "To area" could be a prepositional phrase but it does not appear to have any meaning by itself. One might say "to the area" but never simply "to area."
A prepositional phrase is a group of words containing a preposition, its object, and any modifiers. To identify a prepositional phrase in a sentence, look for a word that functions as a preposition (e.g., in, on, at) followed by a noun or pronoun (the object of the preposition). The words in between form the prepositional phrase.
First, find the subject of the sentence. In this case, the subject is "all," which is a plural subject. It refers to a group-- All boys; all girls; all Americans, etc. But I know what is confusing: "of the class." The short answer is, don't worry about it. Any time you see words like "of", "in", "to", "with," etc, these are all prepositions and this means there's a prepositional phrase coming. Examples: of the class, in the room, at the bus stop, with my friends...-- these are all prepositional phrases. The reason I am mentioning this is a prepositional phrase cannot be the subject of a sentence. For example: the color of his eyes is blue. (Eyes is not the subject. Color is the subject. As for "eyes," it is part of a prepositional phrase-- "of his eyes", and it cannot be the subject. If there were no prepositional phrase, you could say His eyes are blue.) So, just make the prepositional phrase vanish, and you have the subject all by itself. Thus, All (ignore "of the class") are good.
"Through the fog" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence. It acts as an adverbial phrase, providing more information about how little could be seen.
It is a prepositional phrase. It could be used as either an adjective or an adverb.
Since "area" is not a verb, "to area" cannot be an infinitive phrase, or even just an infinitive. "To area" could be a prepositional phrase but it does not appear to have any meaning by itself. One might say "to the area" but never simply "to area."
No. The phrase "above the surface" is a prepositional phrase which could be used as an adverb. It has a preposition, an article, and a noun, but no adverb.
"As possible" is a phrase that functions as an adverb. It is used to compare two actions or situations to see if they can be done in a similar manner.
No, although "on a perfect day" could be an adverb prepositional phrase. Perfect is an adjective and day is a noun.
No, "in silent agony" is not an adverb phrase. It is a prepositional phrase that functions as an adjective describing where the agony is taking place.
The word "liege" can be a noun or an adjective (meaning loyal). There does not seem to be an adverb form, but you could use a prepositional phrase instead.
First, find the subject of the sentence. In this case, the subject is "all," which is a plural subject. It refers to a group-- All boys; all girls; all Americans, etc. But I know what is confusing: "of the class." The short answer is, don't worry about it. Any time you see words like "of", "in", "to", "with," etc, these are all prepositions and this means there's a prepositional phrase coming. Examples: of the class, in the room, at the bus stop, with my friends...-- these are all prepositional phrases. The reason I am mentioning this is a prepositional phrase cannot be the subject of a sentence. For example: the color of his eyes is blue. (Eyes is not the subject. Color is the subject. As for "eyes," it is part of a prepositional phrase-- "of his eyes", and it cannot be the subject. If there were no prepositional phrase, you could say His eyes are blue.) So, just make the prepositional phrase vanish, and you have the subject all by itself. Thus, All (ignore "of the class") are good.
"Thank you for your attention" could be a suitable alternative phrase to use in professional or formal communication.
The words "on the table" are a prepositional phrase. It could be either an adjective or an adverb phrase. adjective - The book on the table is very old. (modifies book) adverb - He left the book on the table. (modifies left)
There is no direct adverb for the verb draw or the adjective drawn. It could be used in a prepositional phrase meaning done by drawing or sketching (e.g. illustrated by hand).