Please restate your question to cut out the ambiguity and post again.
Identify each phrase: Rattling and sputtering, the old car that Martina had crept up the hill.
I'm not sure which phrase you are asking about. This sentence has quite a few of them. Rattling and sputtering - this is a participle phrase used as an adverb the old car - this is a noun phrase that Martina had - this is a relative clause crept up the hill - this is a verb phrase, consisting of the verb "crept" and the complement "up the hill", which is a prepositional phrase
I'm not sure which phrase you are asking about. This sentence has quite a few of them. Rattling and sputtering - this is a participle phrase used as an adverb the old car - this is a noun phrase that Martina had - this is a relative clause crept up the hill - this is a verb phrase, consisting of the verb "crept" and the complement "up the hill", which is a prepositional phrase
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This means jolly, excellent, or smart. You'd have a rattling good time at the circus.
Infinite phrase
until dinnertime
as a result
If the phrase describes (modifies) a noun or pronoun, it's an adjective phrase. If the phrase describes a verb, adjective, or adverb, it's an adverb phrase.
Defined as the HEAD (H) + CONSTITUENT. Once I identify the HEAD we can determine the category of the phrase. e.g.: PP (prepositional phrase) “in a box” the head is IN; NP (noun phrase) “a box” on its own is a NP.
wearing a coat
I'm afraid I don't have the context of the phrase you mentioned. Could you provide more information so I can help identify the author for you?
This would be the phrase "climbing trees." It is because this phrase works in the sentence to be the direct object.
No. A preposition links a noun or pronoun to a noun form (adjective phrase) or a verb form (adverb phrase. The adjective prepositional phrase can help identify or specify a noun or pronoun.