Asked by j

Which type of phrase or clause is underlined in the sentence?
noun phrase
verb phrase
adjectival clause
adverbial clause

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
I don't see the sentence or the underlined part. Please paste the sentence (or just the underlined section) and I will identify which type it is.

Meanwhile, here are quick tests you can use to decide:

- Noun phrase: centered on a noun or pronoun (e.g., "the tall man", "my new car"). You can often replace it with a pronoun (he, it, they).
- Verb phrase: contains the main verb and any auxiliaries (e.g., "is running", "has been eaten"). It expresses the action or state.
- Adjectival (relative) clause: a clause that modifies a noun, usually begins with who/whom/which/that/whose/where/when (e.g., "the book that I read", "the woman who called").
- Adverbial clause: a clause that modifies a verb, adjective, or whole clause, usually introduced by subordinating conjunctions such as because, although, if, when, while, after, before, since, so that (e.g., "because she was late", "when the bell rang").

Paste the sentence and I'll label the underlined part and explain why.