English, asked by meenskshu, 1 month ago

(0) The phrase 'called after me' here refers to
a. tease someone.
b. shout at
C. Summon or request something
d. To cause embarrassment​

Answers

Answered by deepak24677
4

Answer:

Tease someone is the correct opinion of my

Answered by pragyan07sl
1

Complete Question:

Reading the news, he called after me, "Don’t go so fast, you will get to your work in plenty of time!".

The phrase 'called after me' here refers to

a. tease someone.

b. shout at

C. Summon or request something

d. To cause embarrassment​

Answer:

The phrase 'called after me' here refers to tease someone.                         Explanation:

  • In English grammar, a phrase stands for a group of two or more words acting as a meaningful unit within a sentence or clause.
  • A phrase is characterized as a grammatical unit at a level between a word and a clause most often preferred to form a meaningful grammatical unit within a clause.
  • A phrase is composed of a head (or head/root word) which determines the grammatical nature of the unit—and one or more optional modifiers.
  • Some common types of phrases include noun phrases (such as a good friend), verb phrases (drives carefully), adjective phrases (very cold and dark), adverb phrases (quite slowly), and prepositional phrases (assure of) etc.
  • The phrase 'called after me' refers to the meaning of teasing someone or calling someone by his name or by an already taken name in the purpose of making fun of someone/something.
  • For example, reading the newspaper, he called after me, "Don’t go so fast, you will get to your work in plenty of time!".- means he called me by my name.

Therefore option a. tease someone is correct answer.

#SPJ2

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