The group rode the first ten miles in one hour.
"Rode" is the predicate
When I run 10 miles in 10 minutes, I use extrapolation to see how long it takes to run 30 miles. =_=
66 miles per hour
I'm guessing that you left out the first sentence, where it says something like:"Sam and Freidel are driving their new sports car down themiddle of the highway at a speed of 'S' miles per hour." Then the expression you've demanded is ( S t/60 ) .
116
(7 / 4.5) * 225 = 350 miles in 7 hours.
No.
The nouns in the sentence are: hunt, food, bears, miles, and land.
A literal sentence is a sentence that uses an actual example of what you are talking about. For example, he drove down the street at 50 miles per hour is a literal sentence.
If it's a part of the name like Nurse Mary or the first word of a sentence or a first word of dialogue...
The pronoun in the sentence is their, a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to people or things.In the case of the example sentence, the pronoun 'their' takes the place of a plural noun, or two or more nouns for a previously mentioned group of people or the people of a given place.
The Amazon River stretched for miles.
The expanse of the desert stretched for miles.
The sprawling metropolis stretched for miles.
The common nouns in the sentence are:travelerspeedmileshourNote: The word 'twenty' is functioning as an adjective describing the noun 'miles'.
A group of lions is a pride. The cry is a deep throated roar that can be heard many miles away.
The word mile is a length. Sentence- I am about to drive 403 miles to Glasgow.
You have jogged ten miles already and you havethree more to go.There are two verbs / phrases in this sentence: have jogged and haveHave jogged is present perfecthave is present simple