Appositives Are Function of Nouns which Gives Additional Information to Nouns Pronouns And the Like
However I Dont really know what an Appositive Phase is? Did you mean Appositive phrase? If you did then Here is an example
Demi,My Dog, Is Ill
The Appositive thre is My Dog because you give an additional information on demi
:]
Jon, the best student in the school, got an A in the exam.An appositive is a noun that comes before or after another noun that has the same meaning.In this sentence student is the appositive it means the same as Jon. The appositive comes after the subject Jon.'The best student in the school' is an appositive phrase.In the next example the appositive comes before the subject of the sentence:An excellent netball player, Sarah never misses a goal.Sarah is the subject. player is the appositive. Appositive phrase is 'an excellent netball player'.
No, appositive is not a tense.An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it. The appositive can be a short or long combination of words. For example:An insect, a cockroach, is crawling in your shoe.In this sentence "a cockroach" is the appositive it renames "An insect".Another example:Jon, a very good chess player, won the game in less than an hour.
Appositives
An appositive describes a person. So in the sentence, My sister, Katie, is wearing a skirt., the appositive would be "my sister."In that sentence, the appositive would be "the composer." The simple subject is Bethoven, which is a proper noun.
The appositive in the sentence "The book Jerome was carrying, a dictionary, fell into the mud", is dictionary which is describing the noun book.The appositive 'dictionary' renames the subject noun 'book'.
Technically, there is no appositive in the given sentence.The noun phrase a tossed one renames the direct object, 'salad', making the noun phrase an object complement.The difference between an appositive and an object complement is that an appositive can rename any noun in the sentence, and an object complement can only rename the direct object.
Abraham Lincoln, one of the U.S.'s finest presidents, was known for his height. The appositive is "one of the U.S.'s finest presidents". It gives more info about the subject, "Abraham Lincoln".
An appositive follows a noun. See examples below:My computer, a dinosaur from the last century, hasn't worked in years.The noun before the appositive is the word computer.The appositive phrase is highlighted.
Jon, the best student in the school, got an A in the exam.An appositive is a noun that comes before or after another noun that has the same meaning.In this sentence student is the appositive it means the same as Jon. The appositive comes after the subject Jon.'The best student in the school' is an appositive phrase.In the next example the appositive comes before the subject of the sentence:An excellent netball player, Sarah never misses a goal.Sarah is the subject. player is the appositive. Appositive phrase is 'an excellent netball player'.
an appositive doesn't add clauses to a sentence
The number that is positive Like -8 the appositive is 8 or 8 the appositive is 8
The number that is positive Like -8 the appositive is 8 or 8 the appositive is 8
The appositive is "a star", which renames the noun phrase "the sun".An appositive should be set off from the rest of the sentence by commas before and after.
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.The noun"Violet" is appositive in that sentence. It renames the noun phrase "her sister".
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.The appositive in the sentence is the noun Mike which renames the noun phrase 'your brother'.
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.The appositive in the sentence is Bob Huylett, which renames the noun 'author'.
No, appositive is not a tense.An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it. The appositive can be a short or long combination of words. For example:An insect, a cockroach, is crawling in your shoe.In this sentence "a cockroach" is the appositive it renames "An insect".Another example:Jon, a very good chess player, won the game in less than an hour.