Brazilians find it offensive when guests, tourists, and visitors want to do everything in a hurry, speak impatiently and rudely, show a complete lack of manners, find fault with everything, and don't want to try Brazilian food.
Brazilians find it offensive when people behave and speakto them in arrogant, condescending, discourteous, disrespectful, impatient and rude ways, because Brazilians tend to be an accommodating, easy going, hospitable and welcoming people that are tolerant of individual and cultural differences.
A sentence phrase is a group of words that together express a complete thought, but it is not a complete sentence on its own because it lacks either a subject or a verb. Sentence phrases are often used in combination to form complete sentences.
No, but it can have the meaning of an entire sentence.
A gerund phrase is not considered a sentence. See below: waiting for the bus (a gerund phrase, not a complete sentence) While waiting for the bus, I like to listen to music. (complete sentence)
"They can" is a complete sentence, not a phrase.
An absolute phrase is a phrase that when you add the words Was or Were you can get a complete thought out sentence.
"Could have forgotten" is the complete verb phrase in the sentence, "Could you have forgotten your sunglasses in the car."
Lisa wants to go quickly.
A sentence gives a complete thought, with a subject and verb. A phrase is a sequence of words intended to have meaning.
The best of Brazil is the brazilians !
Sure! A partial phrase is a group of words that does not form a complete sentence on its own. For example, "in the morning" is a partial phrase because it lacks a subject and verb to make it a complete sentence.
No, a preposition is not a complete sentence. It is a part of speech that typically comes before a noun or pronoun to show its relationship to another word in the sentence. A complete sentence must have a subject and a verb.