A good prepositional phrase to complete the sentence could be "over the calm waters of the lake." This phrase adds detail to the scene, indicating where the red-winged Blackbirds are flying in relation to the lake.
No, the phrase 'black as pitch' is never used in the book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.However, in Through the Looking Glass, the phrase 'as black as a tar barrel' appears in the poem about Tweedledum and Tweedledee.Just then flew down a monstrous crow,As black as a tar-barrel;Which frightened both the heroes so,They quite forgot their quarrel.'
flew
No, a collective noun is a noun followed by a prepositional phrase: noun+of+noun. A collective noun with prepositional phrase forms a noun phrase: any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun (without a verb) that can function in a sentence as a subject, object of a verb or a preposition.collective noun phrase as subject: A flock of birds flew overhead.collective noun phrase as object: My brother brought a bouquet of flowers for mother.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was released on 11/19/1975.
Went by fast.
near the city
The preposition is into.The prepositional phrase is into a rage.
The correct phrase is "flew past," which means something moved quickly by.
"The plane flew over the village" would be a better way to phrase the sentence.
It is allowed to start a sentence with a preposition. One such sentence might be: "Over the clouds flew the airplane, and no one saw it at all from below."
The first winged spacecraft was the Space Shuttle, developed and operated by NASA. The Space Shuttle made its first orbital flight in 1981 and was used for various missions, including transporting astronauts to and from the International Space Station.
It's a version of 'Icarus' the winged god who stole flew too close to the sun on wings made of wax and fell to his death.
Basically it means that it has eaten a really spicy meatball!
The homophones for the phrase "The plain witch flu bye was noisy" are: plane/plain, which/witch, flu/flew, by/bye, and no/knows.
The phrase "time flew" in this sentence means that time passed quickly or seemed to go by very fast while they were at recess. It implies that they were enjoying themselves and were not conscious of how much time had elapsed.
The past tense of fly is flew.
Final Jeopardy! for Friday, January 23, 2009: Category: Mythological Words & Phrases Answer: This prized object was the coat of the winged ram that flew Phrixus to safety Question: What is the Golden Fleece?