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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Prepositional phrase?

In the sentence, "Freedoms for the United States of America are stated in the Constitution" what is "...for the United States of America..."? Is it considered part of the subject?
  

Top answer

That sounds unnatural to be. I don't really see how we can have 'freedoms for the United States'.

  • That sounds unnatural to be.
  • I don't really see how we can have 'freedoms for the United States'.
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2 Answers
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That sounds unnatural to be. I don't really see how we can have 'freedoms for the United States'.
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AnonymousIn the sentence, "Freedoms for the United States of America are stated in the Constitution" what is "...for the United States of America..."? Is it considered part of the subject?
I don't know whether the quote is valid.

The preposition phrase "for the United States of America" modifies the noun "Freedoms", and as such forms part of the subje

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