I will meet with my manager tomorrow to discuss a pay rise.
to meet her deadline
The underlined words in a sentence can be a noun phrase, verb phrase, prepositional phrase, or any other type of phrase that functions as a unit within a sentence.
"without me" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
The gerund phrase in the sentence is "Planning to succeed." This phrase functions as the subject of the sentence.
A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun. Can you please provide the sentence you are referring to so I can identify the prepositional phrase within it?
to meet her deadline
I'll meet you at your 10-20 after the morning intel dump.
The correct phrase is "Can you meet Heather and me?" In this case, "me" is the correct pronoun to use because it is the object of the verb "meet." If you remove "Heather" from the sentence, it would read "Can you meet me?" which confirms that "me" is appropriate.
"From your school."
"You" is the subject. What did you do? you met. "Met" is the verb. "at the park" is a prepositional phrase (where did you meet?). You met to do what? You met to run. So "to run" becomes the direct object of the sentence.
a sentence phrase is a"sentence "that funtions as a phrase in the sentence. For example: I'm tired of his saying " I'm out of money".
A phrase is an unfinished sentence or a quote.
A prepositional phrase adds details to the sentence.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
The underlined words in a sentence can be a noun phrase, verb phrase, prepositional phrase, or any other type of phrase that functions as a unit within a sentence.
"without me" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
An alternative phrase for "I am" in the sentence could be "I exist."