Answer:
Object (noun phrase).
Explanation:
Lay expresses an action that a person does to someone or something, "put". Lay is a transitive verb that is followed by an object (noun phrase) and optionally a prepositional phrase expressing the location where the person or thing is placed (e.g. down, in, up)!!
The allusion to the apostle Judas, who betrayed Jesus warns listeners not to be deceived by the apparently mild British reaction to the colonists' petitions against tax laws.
The use of the prepositional phrase in this sentence is adjective, because it is part of the noun phrase - the basketball on the roof.
If it weren't a part of the phrase, it would probably be an adverb, but this way, it is not.
Answer:
interrogative and or pronoun
Explanation:
Who (pronoun) The pronoun who, in English, is an interrogative pronoun and a relative pronoun, used chiefly to refer to humans. Its derived forms include whom, an objective form the use of which is now generally confined to formal English; the possessive form whose; and the indefinite form whoever (also whosoever, whom(so)ever
Answer:
1. have
2. were
3. need
4. has, frighten
5. don't, enjoy
6. needs
7. is
8. have, have
9. wants, needs
10. take
11. keep
12. comes, do
13. is (unless series is a plural, then it is are)
14. seem, were
15. are