a sesquipedalian tongue twister
Generally, the last word of a prepositional phrase is the "object of the preposition."
khamiyan or trutiyan
You are referring to the object of the preposition. In "under the sink," "sink" is the object of the preposition.
If they read the same, they're called palindromes.
The word "phraseology" has the root word "phrase" in it.
Crackjaw means a word or a phrase that is difficult to pronounce.
problem
2
Generally, the last word of a prepositional phrase is the "object of the preposition."
alliteration
khamiyan or trutiyan
You are referring to the object of the preposition. In "under the sink," "sink" is the object of the preposition.
The phrase, "after a long sailing voyage" is a prepositional phrase.The word 'after' is the preposition; the noun 'voyage' is the object of the preposition.
There is no specific word for the husband of your wife's sister. If you need a phrase, call him your "sister-in-law's husband."
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant perplexed. You can see how they got this made-up word from the word difficult.
There is no specific word for the husband of your wife's sister. If you need a phrase, call him your "sister-in-law's husband."
In the sentence "Some visitors may find the walk difficult," the verb phrase is "may find." This phrase indicates the action that the subject ("some visitors") might take regarding the object ("the walk"). The word "may" serves as a modal verb, indicating possibility, while "find" is the main verb.