would have worked
A participial phrase describes an action that is being performed secondary to the main action of the sentence. In the sentence "Drinking my soda, I worked on an essay", "drinking my soda" would be a participial phrase. You can also think of it as a phrase (conveys an idea but does not have both subject and predicate) that contains a participle (usually an -ing or -ed verb).
Yes, it would modify a noun (e.g. spot, mark).
The words "would want" is a verb phrase: helper verb would and main verb want.
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.
I believe that the term "With accordance..." is not necessarily a correct phrase. When referring to accordance, one is not with accordance, one would be in accordance. Thus, the term "In accordance..." would be a better phrase to use. For example: "In accordance with the treaty of Versailles..."
"would have worked" is the verb phrase in the sentence. It shows a hypothetical situation in the past where the action of working all summer was contemplated but may not have actually occurred.
No, "in the summer" would be a prepositional phrase.
Maybe the right grammar there is 'at the beginning of summer'. Unless you are using a sentence with the phrase 'at the beginning of the summer vacation', that's when you're supposed to use 'the' before the word 'summer'.
No it's not. The present perfect tense would be she has worked.
What it means is that your over worked or too much work like I would borrow a cats paw.
John Battelle worked at the maintenance desk and cleaned toilets during a summer job at Lair of the Bear, a family summer camp.
I also would like to know. I worked for his brother Col. Bruce Rogers in the USAF in the early 60's.
Maori is the native language of the first inhabitants of the territory of New Zealand. The word used by them to say 'brother' is 'parata', since the word they use to say 'my', is 'taku', then, to say 'my brother', you can use the phrase: 'taku parata'.
Big Brother 12 premiered 8 July 2010 in USA.
A participial phrase describes an action that is being performed secondary to the main action of the sentence. In the sentence "Drinking my soda, I worked on an essay", "drinking my soda" would be a participial phrase. You can also think of it as a phrase (conveys an idea but does not have both subject and predicate) that contains a participle (usually an -ing or -ed verb).
The phrase was used by the Nazis purposefully so that the people coming there would think that it was a work camp and that there was a possibility that they would someday be released if they were cooperative and worked. There were thousands and thousands of Jews arriving each and every day. There were not enough German guards to contain them if they decided to riot and overthrow the Germans. So the phrase was used as a purposeful deception - and, unfortunately, it worked. The phrase is tragically ironic in that Nazi scientists planned out the diets of the prisoners at camps like Auschwitz. The prisoners were given just below the amount required to survive. As they worked, they were using these calories. As long as the prisoners worked, they were dying a death of slow starvation. The only liberty planned for the prisoners was death, and the work done at Auschwitz was the easiest way for the Nazis to reach that goal.
He and his brother Maurice worked in the fields cutting tobacco and when his father Lee began racing he and Maurice would work on the cars.