Prepositional phrase used as adjective

    • [DOC File]NOTES ON PHRASES

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      A type of a verbal that is used as either a. NOUN. ADJECTIVE. ADVERB. EXAMPLES: As a noun—A professional dancer needs to practice. As an adjective—The player to watch is the quarterback. As an adverb—The student used the spell checker to edit the paper. NOTE: to + verb = infinitive. to + noun = prepositional phrase. THE INFINITIVE PHRASE


    • [DOC File]Usage Review - Pompey

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      PARTICIPIAL PHRASES: A participial phrase is used as an adjective to modify a noun or pronoun. Like a prepositional phrase, a participial phrase should be placed as close as possible to the word it modifies. EXAMPLES: Walking to the school, Celia and James found a wallet.


    • [DOC File]More on Phrases: prepositional, verbal and appositives

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      A verbal phrase. consists of a verbal and its modifiers and complements (70). Infinitive phrases . consisit of an infinitive and any modifiers or complements the infinitive has. The entire phrase can be used as a . noun, adjective. or . adverb (78). An infinitive. is a verb form that can be used as a noun, an adjective, or an adverb. Most ...


    • [DOC File]Grammar Lesson 1

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      A prepositional phrase acts as an adverb when it modifies a verb, and adjective, or an adverb. David tried every pair of skis in the lodge. (adjective phrase modifying the noun skis) You can com to the party. (adverb phrase modifying the verb phrase can come) Exercise 1: Circle each prepositional phrase in the following sentences.


    • [DOC File]PHRASES CLAUSES SENTENCES

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      A phrase is a group of related words used as a single part of speech and does not contain both a subject and a verb. 2. A prepositional phrase is a group of words consisting of a preposition, a noun or pronoun that serves as the object of the preposition, and any modifiers of that object.


    • [DOC File]PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES: ADVERB PHRASES

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      Depending on how it is used in a sentence, a prepositional phrase can function as an . adverbial phrase. by modifying a verb, an adjective, or an adverb. For example: She lost her head at the retro love-in. The adverbial phrase “at the retro love-in” describes the verb “lost.” The salesperson skimmed over the product's real cost.


    • [DOC File]Daily Grammar Practice

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      PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE . group of words beginning with preposition and ending with noun or pronoun . can act as an adjective (adj prep ph) (I want a room with a view.) can act as an adverb (adv prep ph) (His house is on the lake.) GERUND PHRASE . gerund plus its modifiers and objects (Writing long essays can be fun.) PARTICIPLE PHRASE (part ph)



    • [DOC File]Advanced Placement Literature/Composition

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      A prepositional phrase functioning as an adverb modifies a verb, an adjective or another adverb and tells “how,” “when,” “where,” “why,” “how long,” or “how far.” Here is a list of commonly used prepositions.


    • [DOC File]Frog Grammar 3: Subjects & Predicates

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      (to + a noun (to Mars – #3) is a prepositional phrase and very different from a TO phrase (I love to Mars / to skate). (TO phrases can be subjects or objects or be aj- or av-phrases (#1-4)© (Some verbs seem to take extra words after them that don’t fit any pattern we’ve studied (#8).


    • [DOC File]Sentence Patterns - Weebly

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      PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE . used as an ADJECTIVE. The robber hid in a dingy basement of an apartment building. The blackbirds stole the berries from the bushes. Picasso made three trips to Paris. Picasso painted with shades of blue. The principal of the grade school cancelled school today because of the snow.


    • [DOC File]Identify the Following parts of speech as one of the ...

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      Top of Form Typically, an adverb or prepositional phrase modifies an intransitive verb or the verb ends the sentence. To determine whether a verb is intransitive ask whether the action is done in some way, in some direction or to some degree.


    • [DOC File]Grammar Cheat Sheet

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      Predicate Adjective: A subject complement that is an adjective. Phrase: A group of words that does not have a subject and its predicate. Prepositional Phrase: A phrase beginning with a preposition, used as a modifier. Appositive: An interrupting definition. Verbal: A verb form used as a noun, adjective, or adverb. Three kinds of verbals:


    • [DOC File]Sentence Patterns

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      PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE . used as an ADJECTIVE. The lion with a wounded paw lay under the shade tree. The dress with red stripes costs over $100. The truck with the flat tire pulled off the road. The technician fixed the laptop with a cracked screen. My dad wears shirts with stiff starched collars every day.


    • [DOCX File]Preposition Use

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      The ending noun or pronoun in the prepositional phrase is called the “object of the preposition” and can never be the subject of a sentence. (Examples: of the boxes; on the shelf) Participial Phrase. Phrase that begins with a verb form that is used as an adjective. “He walked from the fire, broken in mind and spirit.”


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