adjective
The sentence "Can you repair this broken vase" is in the present tense. It is a question asking if someone can fix the broken vase at the current moment.
No, the modifier in this sentence is incorrectly located. It should be revised to: "The broken vase, lying in pieces on the floor, was irreparable."
The cup is broken. This bit of news has not yet been broken.
The verb "is" should be used in the sentence "The vase of flowers is on the table" as it shows the relationship between the subject (vase of flowers) and the location (on the table).
A past participial phrase is a phrase that includes a past participle verb (usually ending in -ed or -en) and functions as an adjective in a sentence to provide additional information about a noun or pronoun. For example, "broken into pieces" in the sentence "The vase, broken into pieces, was beyond repair."
Vase is a noun.
The sentence "Can you repair this broken vase" is in the present tense. It is a question asking if someone can fix the broken vase at the current moment.
The modifier in the sentence is "lying in pieces on the floor," which describes the broken vase.
The participial in this sentence is "broken." It is a present participle that functions as an adjective modifying the noun "vase."
No, the modifier in this sentence is incorrectly located. It should be revised to: "The broken vase, lying in pieces on the floor, was irreparable."
yes, for example..........."The broken vase's edge was jagged."
The cup is broken. This bit of news has not yet been broken.
The Broken Vase was created in 1941.
The vase was broken because it fell from the table.
No, the modifier "lying in pieces on the floor" does not correctly modify the subject "the broken vase was irreparable." This modifier suggests that the broken vase, not the vase itself, is lying on the floor. To correct this, you could say "The broken vase, lying in pieces on the floor, was irreparable."
The Broken Vase - 1913 was released on: USA: 12 August 1913
Put the flowers in the vase.