The subject is never part of a prepositional phrase.
Yes, a prepositional phrase can act as the subject of a sentence. For example, in the sentence "In the park is where we had a picnic," the prepositional phrase "In the park" serves as the subject.
The subject and verb of a sentence cannot be part of a prepositional phrase. A prepositional phrase typically consists of a preposition, its object, and any modifiers. It functions as an adjective or adverb in a sentence.
Use "is" if the subject of the sentence is singular; use "are" if plural. "The fact that I ate after running *is* irrelevant. ("after running" is the prepositional phrase; "the fact" is the subject). The methods prisoners use to escape *are* manifold. ("to escape" is the prepositional phrase; "The methods" is the subject).
"We" is the simple subject. "saw" is the simple predicate. "a loom" is the direct object. "in a weaver's shop" is a adverbial prepositional phrase that tells where the seeing was done.
No, because it does not have a subject and verb. For example, "under the mat" is a prepositional phrase, but it is not a sentence. An example of a sentence that contains a prepositional phrase is "The key is under the mat."
Simple is an adjective, not a preposition or a prepositional phrase.
Yes, a prepositional phrase can act as the subject of a sentence. For example, in the sentence "In the park is where we had a picnic," the prepositional phrase "In the park" serves as the subject.
Our family=subject went=verb on a safari=prepositional phrase in South Africa=prepositional phrase last summer=preposotional phrase ~The Sentence Analysis King
The simple subject is kinds, not orchids. The word orchids is part of a prepositional phrase, so it is not the simple subject.
Several has to be the subject since 'of the caves' is a prepositional phrase and 'are open' is the verb.
The subject and verb of a sentence cannot be part of a prepositional phrase. A prepositional phrase typically consists of a preposition, its object, and any modifiers. It functions as an adjective or adverb in a sentence.
Use "is" if the subject of the sentence is singular; use "are" if plural. "The fact that I ate after running *is* irrelevant. ("after running" is the prepositional phrase; "the fact" is the subject). The methods prisoners use to escape *are* manifold. ("to escape" is the prepositional phrase; "The methods" is the subject).
"We" is the simple subject. "saw" is the simple predicate. "a loom" is the direct object. "in a weaver's shop" is a adverbial prepositional phrase that tells where the seeing was done.
No, because it does not have a subject and verb. For example, "under the mat" is a prepositional phrase, but it is not a sentence. An example of a sentence that contains a prepositional phrase is "The key is under the mat."
The subject is bolt.Of lightning is a prepositional phrase that supplements the subject, can melt is the verb, and sand is the direct object.
No. A prepositional phrase requires a preposition and a subject. (with her, to the cat, for the government, etc) Further, the word, "Or" is a conjunction, not a preposition.
subject = dog present progressive = is walking adverb = slowly prepositional phrase = along the road. The dog is walking slowly along the road