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Yes, an appositive can be inside of a prepositional phrase. For example, in the sentence "The book on my desk, a gift from my friend, is a bestseller," the appositive "a gift from my friend" is inside the prepositional phrase "on my desk."
Prepositions are followed by nouns or pronouns that are called the object of the preposition. If you can't recognise a prepositional phrase then you may get confused about the subject of the verb.With his friend he found the dog.
The prepositional phrase is "for a long visit." It acts as an adverb complementing the verb "came" and answering the implied question, "why did she come?"
An appositive phrase "renames a noun beside it". Like "The thing, a hairy beast, ..." a hairy beast is an appositive phrase. A prepositional phrase is a phrase beginning with a preposition and ending with the object of the preposition. A preposition is something like of or among. "The pancakes were made of 100% potatoes" has the prepositional phrase "of 100% potatoes. Hope this help, and remember that Google is your best friend, IrishKidder.
A prepositional phrase is a word or several words that go with a preposition. A preposition is a word like: on, in, to, at, for, by, with, about. Some examples of prepositional phrases are: in the library, with my friend, to the store, through the tunnel.If you want to use a prepositional phrase in a sentence with a present tense verb, you can. For example, "I usually go to the library in the evening." In this sentence, the present tense verb is go, and there are two prepositional phrases: to the library and in the evening.
in her backyard
Well, honey, of course a prepositional phrase can be part of a dependent clause. A dependent clause is like a needy little sibling that can't stand alone, and a prepositional phrase is just one of the many accessories it can cling to for support. So yes, a prepositional phrase can absolutely cozy up to a dependent clause like a clingy friend at a party.
Nope.One of something... the something should be plural - friends.Nope.It lacks a subject. There is a verb/predicate - Is (Which, by the way, should not be capitalized.). There is a predicate nominative - one. There is an adjectival prepositional phrase that modifies "one" - of your friend(s). But there is no subject, e.g., a third person pronoun (he, she, it) or a proper personal name (Tom, Ed, Mary). Lacking a subject, there is no sentence.
Me an' my friend went to the store. No, no, no. My friend and I went to the store.As a rule of courtesy, you always mention yourself second in a sentence. "I" is the first person (singular) pronoun, and yes, "I" should come second in a sentence. You should put "we" (first person plural) second also.
Yes u can ......... but it usually sounds better in the front.And it depends how u say otherwise too. example. joe and his friend were bored and went too the park..If he was busy he would have done otherwise
how to make friend's