This is wrong because an adverbial phrase <span> the term for two or more words which play the role of an adverb.
this does not include your sentence, here is an example of what i am talking about.
</span><span><span>I will sit quietly.</span>(normal adverb)<span>I will sit in silence.</span>(adverbial phrase)<span>I will sit like a monk meditates.
</span></span><span>(adverbial clause)
hope this helps !</span>
No, this sentence is not a verb phrase, because the subject is not part of the verb phrase here.
Here's why. The subject is "I," the verb is "believed," and everything following the verb ("every word he said") forms the object of the verb. By definition, a verb phrase is one verb + its various objects or modifiers. Here, "every word he said" operates as one single object (it's not just one word, it's EVERY word, and it's not just every word, it's every word HE said). But the subject is separate from the verb phrase, so the entire sentence is not a verb phrase (it's a subject + a verb phrase).
Answer:
In this lesson, you learned about three symbols from The Giver by Lois Lowry: Gabriel, the sled, and the river. Gabriel represents hope and new beginnings, the sled represents journeying through memory, and the river represents escape.
Explanation:
Answer:
im guessing red?
Explanation:
idk what ur trying to ask