Since a verb phrase might use up to four words, a short adverb—such as also, never, or not—might try to sneak in between the parts. When you find an adverb snuggled in a verb phrase, it is still an adverb, not part of the verb. Read these examples: For her birthday, Selena would also like a radar detector.
Then there's the color blue, which we think represents Gatsby's illusions -- his deeply romantic dreams of unreality. ... His gardens are blue, his chauffeur wears blue, the water separating him from Daisy is his "blue lawn" (9.150), mingled with the "blue smoke of brittle leaves" in his yard.
Do you maybe have the book or text this was from so I can try and help?
Answer:
B. Everyone knows that umbrella is mine.
Explanation:
The pronoun mine suggests the speaker is talking about themselves.