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Phrases may function as verbs, nouns, adverbs or adjectives.
A verb phrase consists of a verb, its direct and/or indirect objects, and any adverbs, adverb phrases or adverb clauses that modify it. The predicate of a clause or sentence is always a verb phrase:
A noun phrase consists of a pronoun or noun and any associated modifiers, including adjectives, adjective phrases, adjective clauses and other nouns in the possessive case.
As is the case with nouns, a noun phrase may act as a subject, the object of a verb or verbal, a subject complement or object complement, or the object of a preposition, as in the following examples:
Since some verbals—in particular, the gerund and the infinitive—may act as nouns, they may also form the nucleus of noun phrases:
However, since verbals are formed from verbs, they may also take direct objects and be modified by adverbs. Gerund phrases and infinitive phrases are noun phrases consisting of a verbal, its modifiers (both adjectives and adverbs) and objects:
An adjective phrase modifies a noun or pronoun. Adjective phrases are often constructed from participles or prepositions together with their objects, as in the following:
Example | Explanation |
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I was driven almost mad by the sound of my neighbour’s constant hammering. | The prepositional phrase of my neighbour’s constant hammering acts as an adjective modifying the noun sound. |
My director locked his keys in the trunk of a borrowed car. | The prepositional phrase of a borrowed car acts as an adjective modifying the noun trunk. |
We saw Peter dashing across the parking lot. | Here the participle phrase dashing across the parking lot acts as an adjective describing the proper noun Peter. |
We picked up the records broken in the scuffle. | The participle phrase broken in the scuffle modifies the noun phrase the records. |
A prepositional phrase may also be an adverb phrase that functions as an adverb, as in the following:
Example | Explanation |
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Joe bought some spinach when he went to the corner store. | The prepositional phrase to the corner store acts as an adverb modifying the verb went. |
Lightning flashed brightly in the night sky. | The prepositional phrase in the night sky functions as an adverb modifying the verb flashed. |
In early October, Giselle planted twenty tulip bulbs; unfortunately, squirrels ate the bulbs and none bloomed. | The prepositional phrase in early October acts as an adverb modifying the entire sentence. |
We will meet at the library at 3:30 p.m. | The prepositional phrase at 3:30 p.m. acts as an adverb modifying the verb phrase will meet. |
The dogs were sniffing about the letter carrier’s feet. | The prepositional phrase about the letter carrier’s feet acts as an adverb modifying the compound verb were sniffing. |
© Department of English, Faculty of Arts, University of Ottawa, 2024