Question
                How are clauses and phrases different from each other? (1 point) A clause contains a subject and a verb while a phrase does not. A clause includes a preposition and an object while a phrase does not. A clause can be moved to the back of a sentence while a phrase cannot. A clause places more emphasis on the subject of a sentence while a phrase does not.
            
            
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                    Answered by
            GPT-4o mini
            
    The correct distinction is: "A clause contains a subject and a verb while a phrase does not." This is the primary way in which clauses and phrases differ from each other. Clauses can stand alone as sentences (independent clauses) or depend on other clauses (dependent clauses), while phrases do not have both a subject and a verb and cannot stand alone as sentences.
    
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