If you take out the prepositional phrase, the sentence will still make sense. A prepositional phrase contains a preposition, a noun, and usually an article or other adjective.
"The little children raced around the playground."
If you take out "around the playground", the sentence would still make sense. The word "around" is the preposition and "playground" is the noun that is the object of the preposition.
Therefore, "around the playground" is the prepositional phrase in this sentence.
The preposition is around.
"with its rattle" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
Around the body Around = preposition Body=object of the preposition
adverb NO ITS A PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE!!! It is definitely an adverb because it answers the question "where". Besides, a prepositional phrase needs an object (which has to be a noun or pronoun), and, in this sentence, we don't know around "what".
around the world
A playground is a area for children where they can run around, and have fun on swings, slides, rock climbing, ect.
"Around the next bend" by itself is a prepositional phrase. It cannot be a sentence by itself because it has no subject. In a conversation, a subject may be implied, but that does not make it a sentence.
Yes, in the sentence, "John smiled as his children wrapped their arms around him." the prepositional phrase is, "around him." "him" is the object of the preposition, and is also a pronoun for "John."
You could say, "After running around at the playground, I noticed I was perspiring and needed to drink some water." This sentence helps children understand the word in the context of physical activity and the body's response to heat.
Yes, around the tree is a prepositional phrase.
No, "around" is not a prepositional phrase. It is an adverb that can be used to indicate movement or location. However, "around" can be part of a prepositional phrase when combined with another word, such as "around the corner" or "around the block."
The subject is who, what, or where the sentence revolves around. For example, in the sentence "The dog chased the cat", the dog is the subject. The subject is usually the first noun in the sentence, unless the sentence starts with a prepositional phrase, like "throughout the afternoon".