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Dr.Sam :) i met him, he's really nice.
He met an accident because it was Friday the 13th.
Yes he brutally slaughtered everyone he met
the day she met her teacher
Plato never met Sartre, and so he could never have disagreed with him on any matter.
What role does the infinitive phrase play in the board met to consider the proposal
AdVerb
It is not a sentence, but an infinitive phrase -- the infinitive verb "to consider" followed by the noun "proposal." Depending on how it appeared in a sentence, it could be either a noun phrase, adjective phrase, or adverb phrase.Their only option was to consider the proposal. (noun)The decision to consider the proposal was controversial. (adjective)The board met in special session to consider the proposal. (adverb)
Adverb
The infinitive phrase plays the role of an adverb in this sentence. It tells why you met at the park. In the sentence "You met at the park to run", "to run" is the infinitive phrase.
"You" is the subject. What did you do? you met. "Met" is the verb. "at the park" is a prepositional phrase (where did you meet?). You met to do what? You met to run. So "to run" becomes the direct object of the sentence.
MET = verb who met? Ali, Grigorio = subject nouns to pick berries = prepositional phrase (acting as an adverb) in the nearby field = prepositional phrase (acting as an adverb)
"At the mall" is the prepositional phrase, not the entire sentence.
Adverb
an origan is where two lines on a graph met
We met {accidentally, by chance---we bumped into each other} Nos hemos encontrado..... Nos encontramos..... -------------- We met {in the board room --- there was a scheduled meeting and we met} Nos hemos reunido... Nos reunimos...
Adverb