afraid and scared little
The adjective phrase "an afraid and scared little boy" is located before the subject "stood" in the sentence. It provides more information about the boy's emotional state.
an adjective phrase acts like an adjective and modifies the noun or pronoun in the sentence. an adverb phrase acts like an adverb and modifies the verb, adjective, or adverb in the sentence.
An adjective.
A participial phrase functions in a sentence as an adjective, modifying a noun or pronoun. It provides more information about the noun or pronoun it is describing.
This is a sentence (or clause), not a phrase. The adjective is dumb, and the adverb is very, modifying dumb. So "very dumb" is the adjective 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
trip
noun, adjective, and adverb
Yes, you can have a sentence without a adjetive or adverb phrase. For example, Her name is Sally. No adverb or adjetive!
Study
The adjective in the sentence is "musical." It modifies the noun "scale."
adjective
adjective