No. This term 'phrasal noun is not used in English grammar.
The term phrasal verb is correct but there are no phrasal verbs in 'to have dinner'.
The term noun phrase is correct. A noun phrase is a noun-a person, place, or thing-and the modifiers which go with it. eg 'the neighbours cat'.
can this phrasal verb be separated with a noun or pronoun?breakaway.
A phrasal compound is made up of two or more words used to form a single thought. Phrasal compounds can be a phrasal verb or a phrasal adjective.A phrasal verb is formed by combining a verb with an adverb, a preposition, or both. A phrasal verb can be split in a sentence.Examples: He put on the kettle. (or, He put the kettle on.)ran intoshowed upmade uplooked intoA phrasal adjective is formed any combination of noun, adjective, and prepositional phrases which are used to describe a noun. A phrasal adjective is often hyphenated when placed before the noun it describes but not hyphenated when it comes after the noun.Examples: He has a razor-sharp wit. (or, His wit is razor sharp.)middle of the roadaccident pronefour foot tallfresh baked
A phrasal compound is made up of two or more words used to form a single thought. Phrasal compounds can be a phrasal verb or a phrasal adjective.A phrasal verb is formed by combining a verb with an adverb, a preposition, or both. A phrasal verb can be split in a sentence.Examples: He put on the kettle. (or, He put the kettle on.)ran intoshowed upmade uplooked intoA phrasal adjective is formed any combination of noun, adjective, and prepositional phrases which are used to describe a noun. A phrasal adjective is often hyphenated when placed before the noun it describes but not hyphenated when it comes after the noun.Examples: He has a razor-sharp wit. (or, His wit is razor sharp.)middle of the roadaccident pronefour foot tallfresh baked
A phrasal compound is made up of two or more words used to form a single thought. Phrasal compounds can be a phrasal verb or a phrasal adjective.A phrasal verb is formed by combining a verb with an adverb, a preposition, or both. A phrasal verb can be split in a sentence.Examples: He put on the kettle. (or, He put the kettle on.)ran intoshowed upmade uplooked intoA phrasal adjective is formed any combination of noun, adjective, and prepositional phrases which are used to describe a noun. A phrasal adjective is often hyphenated when placed before the noun it describes but not hyphenated when it comes after the noun.Examples: He has a razor-sharp wit. (or, His wit is razor sharp.)middle of the roadaccident pronefour foot tallfresh baked
No, dinner is a noun. The corresponding pronoun for dinner is it.
The noun 'dinner' is a singular, common, abstract noun, a word for a concept, a word for a thing.
Yes, the noun 'dinner' is a common noun, a general word for the main meal of the day.
Yes, the noun 'dinner' is a common noun, a general word for the main meal of the day.
Yes, the noun 'dinner' is a word for the main meal of the day, a word for a thing.
A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words that are used together to represent a single concept, such as "toothbrush" or "swimming pool."
Yes, the word 'dinner' is a noun, a word for the main meal of the day, a word for a thing.
A phrasal preposition consists of more than one word, like 'in front of', 'on behalf of'. A prepositional phrase is a preposition (simple or phrasal) + noun phrase object: 'on the desk', 'in front of the fireplace'.