Venue is a noun for the jurisdiction in which a crime is committed, a jury is empaneled, and the case tried; or the scene or locale of a large gathering such as a sporting or entertainment event (or a trial).
For Example:
We are now going to the band's venue.
Did you attend last night's venue?
The trial is being held in a public venue.
Old is relative.
Enzymes function as cell catalysts.
The book's spine cracked as she opened it.
I have finished the race.
The nouns in the sentence are dad and ladders.
The noun is "one." It can also be a pronoun in other uses.
Spill can be a verb or a noun. Here are sentences illustrating both uses: Verb: Be careful not to spill your drink on my new carpet. Noun: There was a large oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.
A pronoun sentence is a sentence that uses a pronoun to replace a noun. For example, instead of saying "John is going to the store," you could say "He is going to the store." An adjective sentence, on the other hand, is a sentence that uses an adjective to describe a noun. For example, "The cat is black" is an adjective sentence because it uses the adjective "black" to describe the noun "cat."
Use your question. Your question uses sentence in a sentence. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Previous Answer: You should write it like an exclamatory: I don't know how to write sentence! Imperative (question): Do you know how to write a sentence? Or just plain old sentence: I wrote a run-on sentence.
The sentence contains 2 nouns - "seamstress" and "tape measure".
Shorthand uses symbols that are unavailable.
"I wrote a sentence that uses the word "consummation"."Your welcome =D