This version of HyperGrammar 2 has been archived and won’t be updated before it is permanently deleted.
Please consult the revamped version of HyperGrammar 2 for the most up-to-date content, and don’t forget to update your bookmarks!
Previous Page Next Page
A phrase is a group of two or more grammatically linked words without a subject or predicate. However, a group of grammatically linked words with a subject and predicate is called a clause.
The word group teacher both students and is not a phrase because the words have no grammatical relationship to one another. Similarly, bay the across is not a phrase. In both cases, the words need to be rearranged in order to create phrases. The word groups both teachers and students and across the bay are both phrases.
Phrases add information to sentences and may function as subjects, objects, subject complements or object complements, verbs, adjectives or adverbs.
The highlighted words in each of the following sentences make up a phrase:
Previous Page
Next Page
© Department of English, Faculty of Arts, University of Ottawa, 2024