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The prepositional phrase is from the zoo.
From the zoo
The word "gently" is an adverb. The phrase "in her hands" is an adverb phrase.
lunging
adjective phrase
A gerund phrase is not considered a sentence. See below: waiting for the bus (a gerund phrase, not a complete sentence) While waiting for the bus, I like to listen to music. (complete sentence)
An absolute phrase is a phrase that when you add the words Was or Were you can get a complete thought out sentence.
The homophone for "frays" is "phrases." They sound the same but have different meanings.
"They can" is a complete sentence, not a phrase.
No, that's a phrase, not a sentence. A complete sentence which includes that phrase might be, I like watching the brilliant sunset over the desert.
"Could have forgotten" is the complete verb phrase in the sentence, "Could you have forgotten your sunglasses in the car."
Lisa wants to go quickly.
A sentence gives a complete thought, with a subject and verb. A phrase is a sequence of words intended to have meaning.
No, because it does not have a subject and verb. For example, "under the mat" is a prepositional phrase, but it is not a sentence. An example of a sentence that contains a prepositional phrase is "The key is under the mat."
Please phrase this in the form of a complete sentence.
The length of his sentence is in question. A complete sentence is better than a fragment or a phrase.
No. a preposition introduces a phrase that modifies another word, phrase, or clause.