parrot
Lisa wants to go quickly.
A complete sentence.A phrase can never stand on its own as a complete sentence, as it does not contain a subject and predicate pair It is missing either one component or the other.
The phrase "can't be" is incorrect because it lacks a subject. By adding either "it" or "That" the phrase becomes a complete sentence. It can't be! That can't be!
complete as of right now
It's an adjective.
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.
no,because not all phrase has not a complete thought.
The term 'fresh foods' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit in a sentence.The noun phrase 'fresh foods' is made up of the noun'foods' described by the adjective 'fresh'.A noun phrase functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples of a noun phrase in a sentence:Fresh foods are the basis of our diet. (subjectof the sentence)The flavors that fresh foods provide improve any dish. (subject of the relative clause)We prefer fresh foods. (direct object of the verb 'prefer')This market is a good source for fresh foods. (object of the preposition 'for')
of the people
parrot
Lisa wants to go quickly.
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.
"They can" is a complete sentence, not a phrase.
Yes, "before we went out" is a phrase because it consists of a group of words that convey a complete idea but is not a complete sentence on its own.