<span>The sentences that contain prepositional phrases in brackets are:
1) (The man in the house) seemed to be asleep.
2) </span><span>The soldiers crept cautiously (through the tunnel.)
</span><span>A prepositional phrase is defined as a set of words that lack a verb or a subject. If you see that some part of a sentence lacks either verb or subject and contains a preposition - it is a prepositional phrase. The first sentence lacks a verb, but there is a subject and preposition 'in'. The second sentence contains preposition 'through' and object which is also a characteristics of prepositional phrase.</span>
Answer: one relays
Explanation: it helps because the rock is actual Johnson Dwayne and stuff so it is one relays
Answer:
Answer is D
Explanation:
A paradox contradicts itself. In the sentence Archibald's plan to win is so "stupid" it might just be "brilliant", those two words are the opposite.
Is this word and parentheses a transitive verb? My mother ( bought) two tickets