The phrase "in the morning just before sunrise" is a fragment because it lacks a subject and a verb that would make it a complete sentence. It provides a temporal context but does not express a complete thought. To transform it into a complete sentence, you could say something like, "I enjoy walking in the morning just before sunrise."
The appositive is "a star", which renames the noun phrase "the sun".An appositive should be set off from the rest of the sentence by commas before and after.
No, "The brilliant sunset over the desert" is a sentence fragment because it lacks a subject and a verb. A complete sentence needs both a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or what is happening).
An independent expression, often lacking an antecedent, attached to a sentence as a prepositional phrase. For example, "in any case, I wouldn't care." (Coincidentally, "for example," as used in the previous sentence, is an elliptical phrase.
The term 'at the stars' is a prepositional phrase; the noun 'stars' is the object of the preposition 'at'. This prepositional can modify a verb in a sentence, making it an adverbial phrase. Examples:Matt looked at the stars.Matt threw the snowball at the stars on the billboard.Or this phrase can modify a noun in a sentence, making it an adjective phrase. Examples:Matt took a look at the stars.
A simple predicate consists of only a verb or verb phrase. In this sentence the verb phrase is -- has started
"in 1789" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
the prepositional phrase in that sentence is{before the invention],because a prepositional phrase consists of a noun phrase+ a preposition.
A preposition refers to the position of an object therefore in this sentence "at home" is the prepositional phrase
The phrase "before you watched me swim" is a dependent clause (meaning that it couldn't stand along as a sentence).
Yes, "before we went out" is a phrase. In linguistic terms, a phrase is a group of words that functions as a single unit in the syntax of a sentence. In this case, "before we went out" acts as a prepositional phrase, providing information about the timing or sequence of events.
Where is the sentence? If you mean in the one you just stated, in this sentence is the prepositional phrase.
He really hoped that his acne would clear up before the school prom. The weather started to clear up before the end of the school day.
No, "before we went out" is a dependent clause, not a complete phrase on its own. It lacks a subject and does not form a complete sentence by itself.
the phrase "Sea to Shining Sea" means that the The United States is bordered by the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean so the United States stretch from Sea to Shining Sea!
He really got annoyed when the student started to answer back.
"Before" can be used as a preposition to indicate the position in time or space that something occurs. In the sentence "She arrived before the meeting," "before the meeting" is a prepositional phrase that tells when she arrived.