2. Verb-object phrases: sneak past Chencang, drive to Liangshan, be unique, be ignorant of the world, repair roads, love life, write articles, praise me like pearls, stop the wind and be a red flower.
3. Subject-predicate phrase: improve consciousness, emancipate the mind, sunny, comfortable, easy to understand, we study, high morale, firm will, happy body and mind, busy work, today Wednesday, tomorrow's National Day, he is of medium height, and you are a middle school student.
4. Post-complement phrase: You ran too slowly and looked pale. Put your money in the cash box and all the materials were ready. How was your foreign language learning? You sang so beautifully. You cried for ten minutes, stayed here for two or three days and left.
5. Partial phrases: young people with beards, shrewd Lao Wang, fat master, this family, grammatical analysis, wildlife, magnificent mountains and rivers, newly-built school buildings, a writing desk, overlapping tree shadows, using old bicycles, forging ahead, cloudy evening, expressionless thoughts, economic revitalization, intellectual development, framework constraints.
Extended data
In a phrase, the stated part is called the subject, which is generally acted by nouns, noun phrases and pronouns. The part of the statement is called predicate, which is generally acted by verbs, adjectives, verb phrases and adjective phrases. Such as "The meeting is over", "He teaches mathematics", "The land in China is vast" and "The sun is shining".
Subject-predicate phrases can act as subject, predicate, object, attribute and complement in sentences, and some subject-predicate phrases can also act as adverbials. Such as "Chrysanthemums bloom in autumn" (as the subject), "Young people are full of energy" (as the predicate), "Everyone sees a bumper harvest of cabbage" (as the object), "This is a problem that everyone cares about" (as the attribute), "Nothing can be heard in the room" (as the complement) and "The old nun said with red eyes" (as the adverbial).