an otters pocket
"Could have forgotten" is the complete verb phrase in the sentence, "Could you have forgotten your sunglasses in the car."
"Could you have forgotten your sunglasses" is the complete verb phrase in this sentence. It consists of the modal verb "could," the main verb "have forgotten," and the direct object "your sunglasses."
An antoynm is someting that is the opposite of another thing, for example wet is an antoynm for dry. so no you can't use it with that phrase.
It is hard to say because this is not a complete verb phrase It could be past.
No, that wouldn't be a complete sentence. You could end a phrase with are. eg You are stupid. No I am not. You are!
the phrase 'no devils lived on' is palindromic. Maybe a more attractive longer phrase could be created by inserting letters in places other than at the end.
No, the sentence "all you could do was keep writing" is a complete sentence because it has a subject ("you") and a verb phrase ("could do was keep writing"). It expresses a complete thought on its own.
Mathematical phrase is a number phrase which does not express a complete thought.
'Tooth and nail' is the complete phrase.
An absolute phrase is a phrase that when you add the words Was or Were you can get a complete thought out sentence.
Complete myth.
The phrase "Is you read a complete sentence" is not grammatically correct. A proper form could be "Is this a complete sentence?" which asks whether the statement is grammatically sound. To clarify, a complete sentence must contain a subject and a predicate and express a complete thought.