Question
What is a prepositional phrase?
Instead of two or more words that add detail to a noun and together function like an adjective
Instead of two or more words that together function like a noun
a word that proceeds a noun and expresses a relationship between two parts of a clause or sentence
a preposition, followed by object and objects modifiers
Instead of two or more words that add detail to a noun and together function like an adjective
Instead of two or more words that together function like a noun
a word that proceeds a noun and expresses a relationship between two parts of a clause or sentence
a preposition, followed by object and objects modifiers
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
A prepositional phrase is best described as **a preposition, followed by an object and the object's modifiers**. It begins with a preposition and includes the object of the preposition, which may be a noun or pronoun, along with any modifiers of the object. For example, in the phrase "in the park," "in" is the preposition, and "the park" is the prepositional object along with its modifier "the." Prepositional phrases can function as adjectives or adverbs in a sentence, providing additional information about nouns or verbs.