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A verb phrase that acts as a noun is called a? participial. adverbial. infinitive. gerund. Which of the following is the prepos...Asked by Lucy
A verb phrase that acts as a noun is called a(n)
participal
adverbial
infinitive
gerund
Which of the following is a prepositional phrase in the sentence below?
(Applause came from the bleachers.)
Applause came
came from
from
from the bleachers
My answers:
gerund
from the bleachers
I'm indecisive about the second question, I don't know for certain if the prepositional phrase is 'came from' or 'from the bleachers.' Could someone check my answers and help me understand how to identify a prepositional phrase?
participal
adverbial
infinitive
gerund
Which of the following is a prepositional phrase in the sentence below?
(Applause came from the bleachers.)
Applause came
came from
from
from the bleachers
My answers:
gerund
from the bleachers
I'm indecisive about the second question, I don't know for certain if the prepositional phrase is 'came from' or 'from the bleachers.' Could someone check my answers and help me understand how to identify a prepositional phrase?
Answers
Answered by
Reed
You are correct. "came" is a verb. The phrase "from the bleachers" tells where it came from, "from" being the preposition.
Answered by
:/
The correct answer is
from the bleachers
I put
from
and got it incorrect so Reed is wrong
from the bleachers
I put
from
and got it incorrect so Reed is wrong
Answered by
Human
No he was right you misread it.
Answered by
Anon
Yea, Reed is right
Answered by
Anony
Reed is wrong is "from the bleachers"
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