English, asked by SusmitaBhat, 7 months ago

what are phrases and clauses? Illustrate with flowcharts, highlight the sub headings​

Answers

Answered by uddeshya161
1

phrase is a group of words in a sentence that does NOT contain a subject and a verb. In other words, in a sentence, one part with subject and verb is a clause while the rest of it without those two parts of speeches is a phrase. Example: ... He is playing is a clause (subject+verb) and in the field in a phase.

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Answered by piyushraj17097
0

Answer:

Clauses are the building blocks of the English language. Any sentence hat you write which has a subject (the doer of the action) and a verb (an action word) is called a clause. Whereas a phrase is a group of words which makes sense but not complete sense, a clause makes complete sense.

For example, "a clear blue sky" (is a phrase) and "A clear blue sky welcomed me in Leh" (is a clause-The subject is 'A clear blue sky' and the verb is 'welcomed

A phrase is a group of words without a subject-verb component, used as a single part of speech.

Examples:

Best friend (this phrase acts as a noun)

Needing help (this phrase acts as an adjective; see Adjectives and Adverbs)

With the blue shirt (this prepositional phrase acts as an adjective; see Prepositions)

For twenty days (this prepositional phrase acts as an adverb)

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