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Jumanah Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Prepositional verb

Can you please tell me how I can use " between a rock and a hard place"," out the door" , " of my boss" and " to the amusement park" as a prepositional verb?
  

Top answer

Jumanah Can you please tell me how I can use " between a rock and a hard place"," out the door" , " of my boss" and " to the amusement park" as a prepositional verb? I don't think it's possible to use these prepositional phrases as verbs. They are not verbs at all.

  • Jumanah Can you please tell me how I can use " between a rock and a hard place"," out the door" , " of my boss" and " to the amusement park" as a prepositional verb?
  • I don't think it's possible to use these prepositional phrases as verbs.
  • They are not verbs at all.
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4 Answers
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JumanahCan you please tell me how I can use " between a rock and a hard place"," out the door" , " of my boss" and " to the amusement park" as a prepositional verb?
I don't think it's possible to use these prepositional phrases as verbs. They are not verbs at all.
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I'm sorry.
I made a mistake.
I mean prepositional phrases not verbs??
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He was caught between a rock and a hard place.
Go out the door on the left.
The wife of my boss is a stunning beauty.
Let's take the kids to the amusement park.
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