English, asked by ammarumar, 3 months ago

"Flying above the lake" at this time of the night seems a little dangerous.
The highlighted word is:
A) Gerund phrase
B) Adverb Phrase
C) Noun Phrase
D) Adjective phrase​

Answers

Answered by yogeshkumar49685
3

Answer:

"Flying above the lake" at this time of the night seems a little dangerous.

The highlighted word is: A) Gerund phrase.

Explanation:

The gerund phrase consists of the gerund and its object, as well as any modifiers related to the gerund.

[In the given example, the gerund is bold and the gerund phrase is underlined.]

"Flying above the lake "at this time of night seems a little dangerous.

Therefore,

Option A) Gerund phrase is the Correct answer.

Explanation for Incorrect options:-

Option B) Adverb Phrase

"Flying above the lake" is not an Adverb phrase as it is not any group of words that refines the meaning of a verb, adjective, or adverb.

Option C) Noun Phrase

"Flying above the lake" is not an Noun phrase because it is neither a pronoun or any group of words that can be replaced by a pronoun.

Option D) Adjective Phrase

"Flying above the lake" is not an Adjective Phrase as it is not a phrase that's headed by an adjective and provides context, clarity, or details that support that adjective.

                                     

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Answered by anvitanvar032
0

Answer:

The correct answer of this question is Gerund phrase .

Explanation:

Given - Flying above the lake.

To Find - Flying above the lake  at this time of the night seems a little dangerous. The highlighted word is:

Flying above the lake "at this time of night seems a little dangerous. Therefore,  Gerund phrase is the Correct answer.

A gerund phrase is a collection of words that includes a gerund and any modifiers and/or (pro)noun(s) or noun phrase(s) that serve as the direct object(s), indirect object(s), or complement(s) of the action or condition described in the gerund, such as: The gerund phrase serves as the sentence's subject.

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