To help you
a predicate phrase is for example : jack had eaten dog crap. the predicate phrase would be had eaten
No that would not be proper English. Best by itself in a sentence is correct.
I would rather not answer that. Would you rather got to the movies tonight?
Who is the subject of the sentence whereas whom is the object. For example: In the sentence "He gave Joe five dollars." who would replace "he" and whom would replace "Joe" to make the sentence "Who gave whom five dollars?".
Well, it depends on the sentence. In "that's true." it would be but it depends on the sentence. True, primarily is an adjective.
The infinitive phrase in the sentence is "to help you". It functions as the direct object of the verb "would like".
To help you
To vacation in Hawaii
To vacation in Hawaii
To vacation in Hawaii
to vacation in Hawaii
The verb phrase in the sentence is ''would like to see''. It consists of the main verb ''like'' and the infinitive verb phrase ''to see''.
"Wishing" can function as both a gerund and a present participle, depending on its usage in the sentence. As a gerund, it acts as a noun and functions as the subject or object of a sentence. As a present participle, it is part of a verb phrase and shows ongoing action. It is not an infinitive form, which would be "to wish," where "to" is the infinitive marker.
"would have driven" is the verb phrase in the sentence.
"to watch" Hence a slit infinitive is when someone inserts an adverb between the "to" and its verb. The Star Trek saying " To boldly go when no one ......." is a split infinitive; the infinitive should be "to go" not "to boldly" - Correctly phrased the Star Trek saying should read: "Boldly to go where no one...." This is very good info, but if you are on A+ the complete infinitive phrase would be "to watch two movies in a row".
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "would like to see first."The subject of the sentence is the noun phrase "which area."
the phrase would be "of victory"