Where there's smoke there's FIRE.
The earliest recorded version is from 13th century France: "No fire is without smoke, nor smoke without fire. In 1592 the English had this version: "There's no smoke without fire". Today's version is just a variant of these.
What it means: if it looks like something's wrong then something is probably wrong.
"to finish your test" is the infinitive phrase.
Theres at least 60% of the population smoke.
"To finish your test," is an infinitive phrase. It can be used as an object in this example. The goal is to finish your test. The phrase is used as a noun.
(to finish)
Yes, a verb phrase can be split by an adverb or adverbial phrase. For example, in the sentence "I will quickly finish my homework," the adverb "quickly" splits the verb phrase "will finish."
Sure! Here's an example of a participial phrase: "Rushing to finish her homework, Sarah accidentally dropped her pencil." The participial phrase is "rushing to finish her homework."
Theres a video of him on youtube and on it theres like a 3 second clip of him lighting up a bong
where theres a way theres a change
It is finish
finish the complete infinitive phrase is "to finish mowing the yard".
young and foolish
"after you finish writing your paper" is the prepositional phrase in this sentence. It describes when the action of proofreading should take place.