the answer is
Coordinating :)
There are two prepositional phrases : "from the refrigerator" and "for it".
In the sentence ... They must stop eating your food from the refrigerator or pay you?...from the refrigerator is the prepositional clause. 1) It is followed by the preposition FROM 2) The sentence would still make sense without the prepositional phrase... They must stop eating your food or pay you?
Yes, "for dinner" is a prepositional phrase because it begins with the preposition "for" and provides information about when the action of the sentence (typically eating) takes place.
The sentence "ladies are fond of eating" contains a subject ("ladies") that acts as a noun, a linking verb ("are"), an adjective ("fond"), and a prepositional phrase ("of eating") that functions as an adverbial phrase modifying the verb "are."
no maybe if you shut up and not eat meat everyone wont eather you big dummy
Example sentence - We were concerned about his weight and whether or not he had an eating disorder.
To blow up to keep preditors from eating it. It aslo has a gland that has poison if a fish eats it. Eather way it is guarded by adaptions.
A sentence
Eat is a verb.
you could get cold teeth
No
No. They should be refrigerated.