The verb phrase of the flow around the comet's nucleus is called its coma. Is is a form of be, and called is also a verb on its own. The phrase is called is a verb phrase.
the name
English is a very flexible language, and the phrase "go around" can be a noun phrase in some contexts, such as, "Let's give it another go around." But in most contexts, go around is a verb phrase, with go as the verb, and around as an adverb. An example is, "You can get to the next street if you go around that tree."
This is called a phrase.
I believe that phrase comes from the movie starring Bo Derek called "Ten".
Joseph Heller wrote the book called Catch-22 where he coined the phrase.
do go
has been called
an organelle that has a membrane and a cell wall
Une phrase (fem.)
Around the country is a prepositional phrase.
the name
It is the control center of the cell. It holds the cells DNA
Yes, around the tree is a prepositional phrase.
Which phrase defines the time called prehistory
"around the rock" the=article, rock=noun. It's called a prepositional phrase because the first word in the phrase is a preposition. It's called a preposition because it comes before(pre) the position (the rock). Reread that until you understand it.
The phrase from around means, for instance: go get the ball from around the corner. This is basically need to be in a sentence, not just the phrase as such.
The phrase is called a parenthetical phrase when it is enclosed in parentheses. It is used to provide additional information that is not essential to the main clause.