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Burro di arachide is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "peanut butter." The masculine singular prepositional phrase translates literally as "butter of peanuts" in English. The pronunciation will be "BOOR-ro dee ara-KEE-dee" in Italian.
It is the title of a 1985 comedy/horror film. A young person has lost his hair, the solution seems to be to put Peanut Butter on the bald patch. However much butter makes the hair grow fast and long. Later a solution is found and the family return to normal.
"Squiggly jumped out of the buggy." However, do not EVER say "The peanut butter is inside of the pantry." Did you need the of? No. The sentence sounds better when you say "The peanut butter is inside the pantry." In the sentence "Squiggly jumped out of the buggy." you have no choice to you of. You cannot take it out. You can only replace it with a preposition such as from.
MAHN-teh-KEE-yah theh kah-kah-WAH-teh is a Spanish pronunciation of 'mantequilla de cacahuate'. The feminine noun 'mantequilla' means 'butter'. The preposition 'de'means 'of'. The masculine noun 'cacahuate' means 'peanut'. All together, they mean 'peanut butter'.
Prepositional phrase.
No. The word "of" is a preposition. The noun "butter" is the object of the preposition, and together they form a prepositional phrase.
They say hi like anyone else. There is no special "I'm an atheist - how about you?" phrase that is used to feel out new acquaintances to know that it is "safe" to talk about the topics atheists talk about in private (government overthrow, the abolition of crunchy peanut butter, and such)
A sentence
Brandy butter.
It means your everything, basicly what you live on :)
If someone has and attractive body but an ugly face they are a butter face. i.e. She's got a great body, butter face.
Eating is fun This sentence is a gerundial phrase because eating is acting like a noun