Asked by John
e.g. Teenagers watch it 179 minutes a day.
A day is an adverbial phrase, which modifies watch. The preposition 'for' is omitted between it and 179 minutes. 179 minutes is also an adverbial phrase, which modifies watch as well.
This a pattern two sentence composed of a subject, a verb, an object and two adverbial phrases.
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Are the explanations above is grammatical? Would you check them and correct errors?
A day is an adverbial phrase, which modifies watch. The preposition 'for' is omitted between it and 179 minutes. 179 minutes is also an adverbial phrase, which modifies watch as well.
This a pattern two sentence composed of a subject, a verb, an object and two adverbial phrases.
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Are the explanations above is grammatical? Would you check them and correct errors?
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
The only errors I see are these:
The word <i>is</i> is missing before <i>a pattern</i>.
Use italics (see other post and link) when you are referring to words or phrases NOT as grammatical parts of a sentence. So which words/phrases should be italicized?
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The word <i>is</i> is missing before <i>a pattern</i>.
Use italics (see other post and link) when you are referring to words or phrases NOT as grammatical parts of a sentence. So which words/phrases should be italicized?
=)
Answered by
John
e.g. Teenagers watch it 179 minutes a day.
A day is an adverbial phrase, which modifies watch. The preposition 'for' is omitted between it and 179 minutes. 179 minutes is also an adverbial phrase, which modifies watch as well.
This is a pattern three sentence composed of a subject, a verb, an object and two adverbial phrases.
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Thank you for your explanation.
---> A day, 179 minutes
Q) Do we have to use adverb phrase or adverbial phrase?
A day is an adverbial phrase, which modifies watch. The preposition 'for' is omitted between it and 179 minutes. 179 minutes is also an adverbial phrase, which modifies watch as well.
This is a pattern three sentence composed of a subject, a verb, an object and two adverbial phrases.
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Thank you for your explanation.
---> A day, 179 minutes
Q) Do we have to use adverb phrase or adverbial phrase?
Answered by
Writeacher
Adverbial phrase is correct, not adverb phrase.
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