English, asked by kate3174, 1 year ago

Much water has flown down the thames what is the meaning of this phrase

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
10
heya....

this means that the situation is under control and not much damage is caused by that situation.

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Answered by bandameedipravalika0
0

Answer:

Concept :

A phrase is a collection of words that function as one grammatical unit. The English phrase "the extremely happy squirrel," for instance, is a noun phrase that also incorporates the adjective phrase "very happy." Phrases might be made up of only one word or a whole phrase.

Explanation:

  • A set of words without a subject or a verb is referred to as a phrase in grammar.
  • A phrase is just a collection of words. The subject and verb needed to form a sentence are not present in a phrase, regardless of how long or short it is.
  • 'Much water has flown under the Thames or down the bridge' it means and the definition states that it is "used to refer to events/situations that are in the past and hence no longer to be viewed as noteworthy or as a source of anxiety; it's past and all forgotten."

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