Asked by winnie

Which describes a difference between an adjectival phrase and adverbial phrase?(1 point)
Responses

An adjectival phrase functions like a noun in a sentence, and adverbial phrase functions like a verb in a sentence.
An adjectival phrase functions like a noun in a sentence, and adverbial phrase functions like a verb in a sentence.

An adjectival phrase modifies a verb, and an adverbial phrase modifies a noun.
An adjectival phrase modifies a verb, and an adverbial phrase modifies a noun.

An adjectival phrase modifies a noun, and an adverbial phrase modifies a verb.
An adjectival phrase modifies a noun, and an adverbial phrase modifies a verb.

An adjectival phrase consists of two or more words, while an adverbial phrase is usually only one word that ends in -ly.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"An adjectival phrase modifies a noun, and an adverbial phrase modifies a verb."

Explanation: adjectival (or adjective) phrases describe or limit nouns/pronouns; adverbial phrases modify verbs (and also adjectives, other adverbs, or whole clauses), answering how/when/where/why/to what extent.