When we eat breakfast in the morning, we might get crumbs on our desk so then one of my teachers comes and wipes them in a napkin
i like to comb my hair everyday
"With the zigzag comb"
Please keep your comb to yourself. The cock's comb is red. I comb the beach each morning for driftwood, shells, and jetsam.
"With the zigzag comb"
The prepositional phrase in the sentence is "with the zigzag comb," which provides additional information about the White Leghorn rooster.
will your comb untangle your fine toothed hair
I will comb through the records until I find the bill of sale for that horse.
don't tangle my hair when you comb it for me.(:
bison ?
"In the morning, my hair is unkempt and difficult to comb."
"What do a comb, a brush, and a mirror have in common" is the correct form, with the two commas that have been added. (The second comma is optional, but the first one is not.). The subject of the sentence is "a comb, a brush, and a mirror", three distinct things joined by a cumulative conjunction (and). This subject is obviously plural and requires the plural verb form "do".Note that if "and" were changed to "or", which is an alternative rather than a cumulative conjunction, the correct form would be "What does a comb, a brush, or a mirror have in common?"
"of chicken" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence "Each type of chicken has a different comb".
A prepositional phrase is when the phrase starts with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun. Therefore the prepositional phrase in 'A chicken has a comb on its head?' is 'on its head'.