Dad has a secret fishing spot
on route 119 there is a fisherman when you battle him he will have the feebas you can catch them right in front of where he is fishing unless you changed the catchy phrase in dewford town then its position will change
You can capture Feebas on Route 119 in Pokemon Ruby, this is dependant on the phrase in Dewford (that changes it's location) and is luck to find the correct tile that Feebas appears on when fishing.
You have to go to route 119 and do ALOT of fishing because it appears on 6 random tiles that can be changed by changing the trendy phrase in dewford town. Soz but this is the only way without cheating or trading with someone that does have one
Not a phrase but a word. Unique.
Break a leg is a phrase that means Good luck. Bite your tongue is a phrase that means Avoid talking.
Dad has a secret fishing spot
independent clause.
"He moved" is the independent clause because it can stand alone as a complete sentence. "But then" is a subordinating conjunction that introduces the dependent clause which adds more information about the action in the independent clause.
"On the beach" is a phrase, not an independent clause. It does not express a complete thought and cannot stand alone as a sentence.
The opposite of a sentence phrase or subordinate can be a main clause or an independent clause. These are complete thoughts or ideas that can stand alone as a sentence.
An independent clause (or main clause) can be defined as a clause that can stand by itself, also known as a simple sentence. An independent clause contains a subject and a predicate ; it makes sense by itself. Independent clauses can be joined by using a semicolon or a coordinating conjunction such as for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so.
To be an idependent clause a phrase would need a conjugated verb. i.e "a bushel of apples to take home" is a phrase. "I need a bushel of apples to take home" is a complete sentence.
An independent clause can stand alone as a complete sentence; a dependent one cannot. An independent clause (or main clause, matrix clause) is a clause that can stand by itself, also known as a simple sentence. Independent clauses contain a subject and a predicate. Multiple independent clauses can be joined by using a semicolon or a comma plus a coordinating conjunction (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so). The dog is running down the street = independent clause Because its master called it = dependent clause
The phrase "hooray these sentences are not very difficult yet" contains an independent clause: "these sentences are not very difficult yet." The word "hooray" serves as an exclamation and is not part of a grammatical clause. The independent clause can stand alone as a complete sentence.
Oh, dude, that's a lot of grammar terms in one question. So, like, "the group leaders" is an appositive phrase because it renames "the leaders." It's not an independent clause or a direct object, but just a fancy way to add more info about the leaders. Keep it chill, man.
"Christine blew out the candles on the cake" - independent clause "and opened her presents" - dependent clause
A phrase is a group of words that functions as a single unit within a sentence, while a clause is a group of words that contains a subject and a predicate. Clauses can stand alone as complete sentences (independent clauses) or be dependent on another clause to form a complete sentence. Phrases can be part of a clause.