To make it into a phrase you really should be using quotation marks: "for the last time" is a phrase.
Maxwell House coined the phrase good to the last drop. This is considered one of the top 100 marketing campaigns of all time.
Yes, "last night" is an adverbial phrase that functions to modify the verb by indicating the time of the action. It tells us when the action took place.
No. You do not say in the last. You can say at last meaning after all this time. You can say in the last week meaning during the current week
No, "last week" is a noun phrase that refers to a specific period of time in the past. It does not function as an adverb.
The last time I heard that phrase was when I was at McDonalds. The phrase is an inquiry as to whether you desire french fried potatoes with whatever else you ordered.
Subject, verb, prepositional phrase, adverbial phrase
It is an adverbial phrase, not an "adverbial prepositional phrase."There are types of "phrases" that function as adverbs, including adjective-noun phrases like "every time" or "last night" (last can be an adverb, but with a different sense).Infinitive phrases (to verb + complement) can also be adverbs.
the last phrase was -"Bella will you marry me" edward said it
i think it joni mitcell "last time i saw richard" from "blue"
At the last moment, just before it's too late, etc.
What is the last word in the phrase: Negative, I am a meat popsicle
Yes, it is a phrase that indicates time. It will be an adverbial phrase.