"Running at top speed, the athlete crossed the finish line." "Eager to learn more, the student asked insightful questions." "Feeling exhausted after the long day, she took a nap."
Sure! Here's an example of a participial phrase: "Rushing to finish her homework, Sarah accidentally dropped her pencil." The participial phrase is "rushing to finish her homework."
No. The phrase "announced next week" seems to be incomplete. It seems that it is from a portion of the phrase "to be announced next week". I think "announced next week" is rather a participal phrase.
The past participle of "sing" is "sung."
The past participle of "tell" is "told."
Come is the past participle.
a participal phrase is this
Sure! Here's an example of a participial phrase: "Rushing to finish her homework, Sarah accidentally dropped her pencil." The participial phrase is "rushing to finish her homework."
"sleeping in the corner" is the participal phrase
"sleeping in the corner" is the participal phrase
Protected by an umbrella A+
yes... "winding" is a *participle*... not a "participal"...
The word virus is a noun. The plural form is viruses.
had
Chublets!
Participle phrases always function as adjectives, adding description to the sentence.So in the sentence "Charging at the red cloak, the bull missed his mark"Charging at the red cloak would be the participal phrase.
No. The phrase "announced next week" seems to be incomplete. It seems that it is from a portion of the phrase "to be announced next week". I think "announced next week" is rather a participal phrase.
phrase