limb. I.e. an awkward, risky or untenable position.
The words "would want" is a verb phrase: helper verb would and main verb want.
"with a sigh" is a prepositional phrase because it includes a preposition ("with") and a noun ("sigh"), but it does not have a subject and verb to form a complete thought like a clause would.
Slouchy hat ?
Mathematical phrase is a number phrase which does not express a complete thought.
A preposition is a part of speech that starts a prepositional phrase, such as "the man OF THE HOUSE". The preposition would be "of" and the complete phrase would be "of the house". I guess you could say that a preposition describes nouns, as in aforementioned sentence, "man" would just be a plain noun without the phrase.
'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.
no,because not all phrase has not a complete thought.
A sentence requires a subject and predicate. That means a noun and a verb that are in agreement with one another (in terms of singular and plural). A phrase is not a complete sentence. It is a little group of words that go together and function together in some way.Here is a very short but complete sentence:She laughs.You have a subject (a pronoun, which stands "for" ["pro"] a noun) and a verb that agrees with it--that is, both are singular.Here is a very long phrase that is not a complete sentence. This happens to be a prepositional phrase because it begins with a preposition ("in") and ends with the object of the preposition (the noun "house"). All the rest is description of the noun at the end.in the large, ramshackle, isolated, abandoned, and allegedly haunted house(You would not really write like this, we hope, but it would be a correct and grammatical phrase if you did.)If you have a subject and a verb that make a complete sentence, you can't call it a phrase. If all you have is a phrase, you don't have a sentence.
To be an idependent clause a phrase would need a conjugated verb. i.e "a bushel of apples to take home" is a phrase. "I need a bushel of apples to take home" is a complete sentence.
Without the complete context of the phrase, it's a little difficult to translate.The best I can give you is "Really? With you?"De veras, is a phrase that means "Really"Contigo is a the word that means "with you".With the sentences before that phrase, it could possibly take on another context, but with the information provided, that's about the closest translation that you can get.
of the people