I found myself in opposition to all of the candidate's political viewpoints.
No. The phrase "in spite of" is a preposition meaning despite.
yes, if you use it in the middle of a sentence
No! A gerundive phrase can be the entire subject of the sentence and can generally be used in any part of a sentence where a noun is appropriate.
The phrase 'in your face' is a slang term which originates from 1970's America. A lot of the earliest references come from various sports such as boxing and basketball used as a contemptuous phrase used to intimidate the opposition.
A noun is used as the subject of the object of a sentence or phrase.
A sentence phrase is a group of words that together express a complete thought, but it is not a complete sentence on its own because it lacks either a subject or a verb. Sentence phrases are often used in combination to form complete sentences.
The opposition worked to elect their candidate. They were in opposition to the new law.
No, "in spite of" is a prepositional phrase that is used to show contrast or opposition between two ideas. It is not an adverb.
The opposition is fierce, so we must persevere.
The pronoun 'I' is used as the subject of the sentence or phrase; the pronoun 'me' is used as the object of the sentence or phrase.The word It's is the contraction for 'Itis', in this case they are the subject and verb of your sentence or phrase, which means that you need an object for your sentence or phrase:It is me.It's me.
The phrase is "on the shore", used as an adverb (where did he sing?).
which selection best defines the phrase at bay as it is used in the last sentence in paragrah six answer