Basketball, Volleyball, Soccer Ball, Butter Ball and Teatherball.
Compound nouns can be written: As one word: policeman As a hyphenated word: six-pack As two separate words: fast ball
There are no compound nouns in the given sentence.A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own. A compound noun can be joined, separated, or hyphenated.Examples:baseball (base+ball)football (foot+ball)home plateend zonet-shirt (or tee-shirt)
The nouns in the sentence are Jody and ball.
Community wouldn’t be a compound noun as it isn’t made up of multiple words. Take the compound noun: baseball for example, it is comprised of the words base and ball. Both base and ball are nouns, so consequently baseball is a compound noun. Sorry this is so wordy…hope this explanation helps!
Community wouldn’t be a compound noun as it isn’t made up of multiple words. Take the compound noun: Baseball for example, it is comprised of the words base and ball. Both base and ball are nouns, so consequently baseball is a compound noun. Sorry this is so wordy…hope this explanation helps!
No. A compound word is two or more words, most often nouns, combined to make one word: The boy kicked the football. (foot + ball)
Yes baseball is a compound word. The words are base and ball.
Baseballbasketballbutterballcannonballdirtballeyeballfastballfireballfuzzballfootballgumballgoofballhairballhandballhardballhighballmeatballmothballpinballscrewballsnowballsoftballtarballvolleyball
compound
The pronouns that take the place of the noun 'ball' are it, its, and itself.Examples:That ball is very nice. Where did you get it? (personal pronoun)The ball is nice but its price was even nicer. (possessive adjective)The ball itself is nice but it will be great with my initials. (reflexive pronoun)
The dog threw the ball as high as he could and it landed on a trampoline.
net, ball, players