Yes there are probably a few words for striped. All I can think of is Lined!
stars and stripes.
Yes, you use hyphens for the phrase "top-of-the-line." It is a compound adjective that contains a preposition, so it is hyphenated.
No. In this case, "phrase" is being used as a noun, not a verb. Therefore, this is a sentence fragement because it doesn't express a complete thought.You're left trying to figure out "A phrase is what?"In order to make this a complete thought you should add the predicate.example: "A phrase can have many origins."Or...Do you just mean "phrases" in general. If so, then NO once again. A phrase is a group of words which contains neither a subject nor a verb.example: Great answer(prepositional phrase) In a heartbeatThe two examples are incomplete sentences.
The first part of the sentence, "winning the race", is a gerund phrase, and "winning" is the gerund. "Winning the race demanded speed and endurance" is an entire sentence, because it contains a subject (the gerund phrase) and a verb (demanded).
In some fruits , In honey .
"stripes" is a plural noun- "striped" is an adjective a noun is a person, place, thing, or idea- "stripes" are things
John Phillip Sousa
it is a phrase that contains a verb
it is a phrase that contains a verb
The American flag contains six white stripes.
Algebraic expressions is a mathematical phrase that contains operations numbers or variables.
An algebraic expression.
Righe arancioni is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "orange stripes." The feminine plural phrase also translates literally as "straight orange lines" in English. The pronunciation will be "REE-gey A-ran-TCHO-nee" in Pisan Italian.
Appositive phrase
Appositive phrase
Well this would depend on what type of adjective phrase you are talking about. There are three different types of adjective phrases:Head-final adjective phrase - This contains an adverb and then an adjectiveHead-initial adjective phrase - This contains an adjective followed by a preposition and a noun.Head-medial adjective phrase - This contains an adverb followed by an adjective, preposition, and then a noun
A phrase contains either a subject or a predicate but not both. A subject is present in a noun phrase, while a predicate is found in a verb phrase. An example of a phrase with a subject but no predicate is "the big tree."
A prepositional phrase contains more than one word and is introduce by a preposition, which your is not.