its a diagram
A diagram is a noun.
a Venn diagram consists of two overlapping circles, and is generally used as a compare and contrast diagram. a diagram in general is just a way to show information. in short, they are not the same thing, a venn diagram is a type of diagram.
Class diagram represent generalized view of system while object diagram represent view of a system at a particular instant.
In some diagram that is know to you but not to me.In some diagram that is know to you but not to me.In some diagram that is know to you but not to me.In some diagram that is know to you but not to me.
The diagram for "Where did she go?" would typically show 'Where' as the subject, 'did go' as the verb phrase, and 'she' as the object. The placement of words may vary depending on the specific diagramming method used.
The subject of the sentence is implied: youVerb: findDirect Object: easier way (noun phrase)Infinitive verb: to diagram (functioning as an adjective modifying way)Direct object of the infinitive: stories
Sure! Here is a simplified sentence diagram for "Jeff pushed on the button for information": Subject: Jeff Action: pushed Object: button Prepositional phrase: for information
Subject of the sentence: the error (noun phrase)Verb: taughtDirect Object: an expensive lesson (noun phrase)Indirect Object: us
"Are you one of the cheerleaders?" you put you as the subject and are as the predicate. Then you make a diagnal line under cheerleaders (as a modifier) an put "one" on it. After, you do that put your prepostional phrase under you example:. of father is the prepositional phrase! Hope this helped:D:)
There is no way to diagram "Had overslept", because "Had overslept" is not a sentence. For a phrase to be a sentence, it must have both a subject and a verb. "Had overslept" has a verb (had) but not a subject. A subject could be a person, place, or thing. For example: "Alicia had overslept."
A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and usually ends with a noun or pronoun. In diagramming, a prepositional phrase is shown by drawing a slanted line below the word it modifies, with the preposition at the beginning of the line and the object of the preposition at the end. For example, in the sentence "The book is on the table," "on the table" is a prepositional phrase, with "on" as the preposition and "table" as the object of the preposition.
The phrase is a stem-and-leaf diagram or stem-and-leaf chart.
To diagram sentences with prepositional phrases, place the preposition on a diagonal line underneath the word it relates to in the sentence. Connect the preposition to its object with another diagonal line. Label the preposition, its object, and any modifiers. For example, in the sentence "The cat is under the table," you would draw a line from "under" to "table" below "under" and label the preposition as "under," its object as "table," and the entire phrase as a prepositional phrase.
I'm sorry but I do not understand what you are asking at all! Please click on the "improve question" button and phrase this question a bit more clearly!Are you asking what the brain looks like while you are writing?Are you asking how a diagram of the brain helps you to write?Are you asking if there is a pattern?
neat diagram
Its nothing