An entire sentence can't be a conjunction, and there is no conjunction in that sentence.
There is no conjunction in the sentence, "Catching fish is one of the oldest pastimes."
In the sentence, "Catching fish is one of the oldest pastimes.":the preposition = of;the verb = is (a linking verb).There is no conjunction or adverb in the sentence.
In this sentence, "catching fish" is a gerund: a verb that is doing the job of a noun. "Catching fish" is the subject of the verb "is".
Yes, fish in this sentence is a noun.In the example sentence, the noun fish is part of the noun phrase 'catching fish', which is the subject of the sentence.
In the the above sentence the preposition is the word OFas it shows a relationship between the pronoun ONE to the noun phrase THE OLDEST PASTIMES.A preposition is a word that shows the relationship of one word to another.
Yes, nouns are things, places or people.
The word 'fish' is a noun, a word for a thing (things).In the example sentence, the noun fish is part of the noun phrase 'catching fish', which is the subject of the sentence.
The parts of speech for each word in the sentence are:catching: gerund, part of noun phrase which is the subject of the sentence;fish: noun, part of noun phrase which is subject of the sentence;is: verb (linking verb);one: indefinite pronoun, object of the linking verb, a subject complement;of: preposition, connects the object of the preposition 'pastimes' to the subject complement 'one';the: definite article introducing the noun 'pastimes';oldest: adjective, describing the noun 'pastimes';pastimes: noun, object of the preposition 'of'.
No, in the example sentence, the word 'is' is a linking verb.A linking verb acts as an equal sign, the object of a linking verb restates or renames the subject (catching fish = pastime).
In the example sentence, the word 'is' is a linking verb.A linking verb acts as an equal sign, the object of a linking verb restates or renames the subject (catching fish = pastime).
It is a noun.You can tell this because there is 'a' before fish. A, the and an go before nouns:a dog / an apple / the captain.or sometimes the order is adjective + a/the/an + noun:a black dog / an unripe apple / the old captain
Oldest can be used as a superlative adjective to describe the age or seniority of someone or something. For example, "She is the oldest sibling in her family" or "This is the oldest building in the city."