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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Prepositional Phrases

In the sentence,"In front of my house is a snow drift." what is the part of speech and function of the phrase, "In front of my house"? If it is a prepositional phrase, what rule about commas would require it to not be followed by a comma?
  

Top answer

Anonymous what is the part of speech and function of the phrase, "In front of my house"? It's a prepositional phrase. Two, in fact.

  • Anonymous what is the part of speech and function of the phrase, "In front of my house"?
  • It's a prepositional phrase.
  • Two, in fact.
  • "in front" and "of my house".
  • It is a locative phrase (a phrase that tells the location of something), which is adverbial in nature.
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1 Answers
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Anonymouswhat is the part of speech and function of the phrase, "In front of my house"?
It's a prepositional phrase. Two, in fact. "in front" and "of my house". It is a locative phrase (a phrase that tells the location of something), which is adverbial in nature.
Anonymouswhat rule about commas would require it to not be followed by

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