Gnats are small little bugs that like to fly around your head.
I find gnats annoying.
Wow, there are so many gnat here.
Ew, I think I just ate a gnat!
The gnat pestered the poor man .
The word 'gnat' is a noun, a word that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the objectof a verb or a preposition.Examples:A gnat is a very small, very annoying insect. (subject of the sentence)A mosquito can carry diseases that a gnat does not. (subject of the relative clause)I just saw a gnat land in your potato salad. (direct object of the verb 'saw')A big annoyance created by a tiny gnat. (object of the preposition 'by')A noun can also function as:Gnat, get out of my face. (noun of direct address)A gnat's lifespan is brief. (possessive noun)That speck in your lemonade is a gnat. (subject complement)That is a bug, a gnat. (object complement)What are they doing about the gnat problem? (attributive noun)
Gnat is a noun. All insects are things, which are nouns.
In the King James VersionThe word 'gnat' appears only in* Matthew 23:24 Ye blind guides, which strain at a gnat and swallow a camel.
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That fat gnat might be a light mite.
Gnats' hats.
The word "gnat" is in the King James Version of the Bible 1 time. It is in 1 verse, Matthew 23:24 [Ye] blind guides, which strain at a gnat, and swallow a camel.
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