No, "the dog with large teeth chased the cat" is not a phrase; it is a complete sentence. A phrase is a group of words that does not express a complete thought and lacks a subject-verb combination. In this case, the sentence clearly has a subject ("the dog") and a verb ("chased"), making it a complete thought.
who chased who the bear chaesed the bunny cat the cat chased the mouse and the mouse chased rat the rat chased snake to win a race.
Depending on the cat's personality, then yes, it is possible for a cat to be scared of large birds. I have known of a cat to be chased away by a single crow. Some birds are naturally feisty or fearless, so will scare a cat away.
The predicate of the sentence "The dog chased the cat around the yard" is "chased the cat around the yard." It includes the verb "chased" and provides information about what the dog did, along with details about the action and its context.
I chased her until she caught me. The dawn chased the night away. The cat chased the bird to no avail.
The verb eg subject = dog verb = chased object = cat The dog chased the cat
Tweety bird is being chased by Sylvester the cat.
boy -- The boy chased the dog dog -- The dog chased the boy. table -- The boy chased the dog around the table. cat -- The cat chased the mouse. flower -- Flowers are nice.
Tweety as in the yellow canairy is chased by sylvester
The passive voice of "the cat chased the bird" would be "the bird was chased by the cat." In the passive voice, the subject of the sentence receives the action rather than performing it. The passive voice is formed by using a form of "to be" (in this case, "was") followed by the past participle of the main verb ("chased").
he chased a rat and thats is that
The dog chased the cat .In this sentence the subject is dog the verb is chased and the object is cat.The object usually describes someone or something to which or for whom the action of the verb is done.In the sentence above something was chases, what was chased? - the cat.
a large cat that has 2 long canine teeth