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What is a Phrase? Definition, Examples of English Phrases
A phrase is a group (or pairing) of words in English. A phrase can be short or long, but it does not include the subject-verb pairing necessary to make a clause. Some examples of phrases include: after the meal (prepositional phrase) the nice neighbor (noun phrase) were waiting for the movie (verb phrase)
Phrase: Definition and Examples - Grammar Monster
What Is a Phrase? A phrase is a group of words that stand together as a single grammatical unit, typically as part of another phrase, a clause, or a sentence. For example: Our vicar played football before he came here. ("Our vicar" is a phrase. It is functioning as a noun.) She eats eggs in the morning. ("In the morning" is a phrase.
PHRASE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
PHRASE definition: 1. a group of words that is part of, rather than the whole of, a sentence 2. a short group of words…. Learn more.
What Is a Phrase? Definition and Examples in Grammar - ThoughtCo
Glossary of Grammatical and Rhetorical Terms. ThoughtCo. In English grammar, a phrase is a group of two or more words functioning as a meaningful unit within a sentence or clause. A phrase is commonly characterized as a grammatical unit at a level between a word and a clause.
PHRASE Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com
A phrase is a sequence of two or more words that make up a grammatical construction, usually lacking a finite verb and hence not a complete clause or sentence: shady lane (a noun phrase); at the bottom (a prepositional phrase); very slowly (an adverbial phrase).
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