A prepositional phrase for the US could be "in the United States." This phrase includes the preposition "in" followed by the noun phrase "the United States," indicating a location. Prepositional phrases often provide additional information about time, place, or direction in a sentence.
John O'Sullivan used the phrase "manifest destiny" to argue for his position that the US should expand across North America. He first used the phrase in 1845.
That phrase "We the people..." is not in the Declaration of Independence. It is in the US Constitution.
The phrase first appeared on U.S. currency in 1957 on the $1 silver certificate.
Need to know the denomination, mintmark, and condition. This motto is on almost all US coins.
It means a small worthless amount. Origins somewhere in the US or Canada
In the sentence "Mars is not far from us," the prepositional phrase is "from us." This phrase indicates the relationship of distance between Mars and "us." The word "from" is the preposition, and "us" is the object of the preposition.
There are no negatives in the phrase "father and us".
The noun phrase in the sentence is "that woman over there." It can be replaced with the pronoun phrase "she will help us."
In the sentence "Only one of us can play the guitar," there is no adjective phrase. The phrase "only one of us" functions as a noun phrase, where "only" is modifying "one." An adjective phrase typically describes a noun and would include an adjective and its modifiers.
Yes
"Can show" is the verb phrase
The correct phrase is "I appreciate you supporting us." This indicates gratitude towards the person performing the action (supporting).
from
The phrase "Allah asked us" is mentioned 17 times in the Hadith.
Please tell us in your question what language the phrase is in.
It could be either an adjectival phrase or an adverbial phrase, depending on whether the phrase modifies a noun or a verb. Lets start with a simple sentence: "The boy threw the ball." That doesn't tell us very much. It doesn't tell us which boy threw the ball or where he threw it. So now let's add the phrase "in the classroom." Let's say, for example, "The boy in the classroom threw the ball." Here the phrase modifies the noun 'boy.' It tells us which boy, and is therefore an adjectival phrase. But, "The boy threw the ball in the classroom," is different because the phrase modifies the verb 'threw' by telling us where the ball was thrown. Therefore it is an adverbial phrase.
"Us her fair" is "a surfer."