Katie, lock the barn.
You couldn't hit the side of a barn if you were standing inside of it.
Please put the horse in the barn.
"A tornado hit the barn." would be a sentence.
The barn fell down because it was not properly erected.
Please put fresh hay in the manger, as we are expecting visitors. The manger is in the barn.
the church owned the tithe barn and they put all there tithes (a tenth) in the tithe barn
As a matter of fact, I was born in a barn.I'd never seen a barn dance, before tonight.That horse is quite likely to bolt for the barn.
No, the word 'old' is used as an adjective to describe the noun 'barn'. Example sentences for the noun 'old': The agency provides home services for the old and disabled in the community. We carry sheet music of all types, both the old and the new.
The barn is used to store up to 6 items (like your holiday decorations, for example). You can't put animals in it :(
Nope.
An example of a compound prepositional phrase in a sentence is "She walked down the street and into the park." In this sentence, "down the street" and "into the park" are both compound prepositional phrases because they each consist of more than one prepositional phrase combined together to provide more detail about the action of walking.
The nouns are tree, field and barn. There are no pronouns.
The pyromaniac was discovered in the barn, with matches and tinder.