A phrase is a group of words, without a subject or a verb, that functions in a sentence as a single part of speech. ... A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or a pronoun. This noun or pronoun is called the “object of the preposition
Answer:
Get to know yourself before you get to know someone else
Be friend first
Keep your thoughts clean
Answer:
C. Helen told Fred that she would love him ever-more.
Explanation:
The hyphen is a punctuation mark that is used to separate syllables of a single word and also join words that are to be taken as "one meaning or idea". When it is used in such a way, then the word is called or referred to as "a hyphenated" word.
Among the given options, the sentence that requires no use of the hyphen is the third sentence. Here, <u>"ever-more" doesn't need to be joined nor are they a single word. </u>
Thus, the correct answer is option C.
What wealth [metaphor: "wealth"=contentment, meaning] the show [metaphor for the beauty of Nature in the "show" of the daffodils] to me had brought
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