"The inventor was given an award" - however, active voice is almost always clearer.
There are no common nouns in the sentence. The noun Tallchief is a proper noun, the name of a person. The noun Indian Achievement Award is a proper noun, the name of a specific prize.
No. Who was the star.....
No. "Award" would be capitalized if it were where part of the name of a particular award (e. g. "Darwin Award"). As a common noun applying to any old award, or in this compound adjective, there is no reason to capitalize it.
The award recipient expressed her deep appreciation to the society for acknowledging her work.
We conceded that the other team won the award fair and square.
because of he have get the award
Yes, "The award was presented to him" is correct. It is a passive construction where the award is the subject and "him" is the recipient of the award.
The nouns in the sentence are award and job.
This sentence is a declarative sentence, as it makes a statement about the award ceremony taking place on Tuesday.
He is working hard to achieve his goal so that he could get an award
The sentence is a declarative sentence, it makes a statement.
The sentence from the passage that explains the "special award" for Donald's pie would be: "Donald’s pie was deemed the best overall and earned him a special award for creativity and taste."
He will accept the award on Saturday
The correct phrasing is "I want to present this award to Mary."
The correct sentence is "Give the award to whomever you think is best."The pronoun "whomever" is the objective form, functioning as the object of the preposition "to".The pronoun "whoever" is the subjective form.
There is no information to suggest that Otis Boykin received the Cultural Science Achievement Award. Otis Boykin was an inventor and engineer known for his work in resistors and other electronic innovations, but there is no record of him receiving this specific award.
The editor of the book got an award.