Question
A) How is a phrase different from a dependent clause? (1 point)
A phrase has both a noun and a verb, but a dependent clause does not.
A dependent clause cannot stand alone in a sentence, but a phrase can.
A phrase has either a noun or a verb, but a dependent clause has both.
A dependent clause can stand alone in a sentence, but a phrase cannot
A phrase has both a noun and a verb, but a dependent clause does not.
A dependent clause cannot stand alone in a sentence, but a phrase can.
A phrase has either a noun or a verb, but a dependent clause has both.
A dependent clause can stand alone in a sentence, but a phrase cannot
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct answer is: **A phrase has either a noun or a verb, but a dependent clause has both.**
To elaborate, a phrase is a group of words that does not contain both a subject and a verb, while a dependent clause contains both a subject and a verb, but cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.
To elaborate, a phrase is a group of words that does not contain both a subject and a verb, while a dependent clause contains both a subject and a verb, but cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.
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