"The canoe with the blue stripes" is the fragment, a noun phrase with no verb. The phrase is the subject or the object of a sentence, but it isn't a sentence. Samples of the completed sentence with the subject and the verb in bold:
Subject: The canoe with the blue stripes isMr. Jones' canoe.
Object of the verb: I rented the canoe with the blue stripes.
Object of a preposition: I saw him in the canoe with the blue stripes.
The following are complete sentences, the subject and the verb in bold:
The truth can be unpleasant.
The rams locked horns and the tourists watchedthem from far away.
The dancer floated across the stage.
D. The Canoe with the blue stripes.
Yes, after rapid you need a comma and another action like: while they floated down the rapid, they ate sandwiches.
A. The truth can be unpleasant B.The rams locked horns, and the tourists watched them from far away. C.The dancer floated across the stage D. The canoe with the blue stripes The answer is D There is no reference as to what the canoe did.
There are two syllables in the word 'floated'.
If she floated she was considered a witch. If she drowned she was considered innocent.
floated, (the past tense of float)
That is the correct spelling of "floated" (was held on the surface of a liquid, or in the air, by buoyancy).
Engineered hardwood floors can be floated, but not solid hardwood floors.
The word floated has 2 syllables:floa/tedThe word floated has 2 syllables: floa/ted
A tender floated is a call for bids by vendors who are interested in participating in a project.
The balloon floated about the same distance as the toy airplane could go.
Yes, floated is past principle, past tense of float. Which is then a verb of float.EG. "Trees were felled and floated downstream".