There are two nouns, strawberry and cake.
A noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun.
Example questions that are answered by nouns:What is your name?Where did you go to school?Would you like chocolate or strawberry?
areIn this sentence skiing and skating are not verbs. They are gerunds = verbs acting like nouns
Two, bolt and blue. "It" is a pronoun.
There are three nouns in the sentence:mornings (plural), object of the preposition 'in';people (plural), subject of the sentence;coffee (uncountable), direct object of the verb 'drink'.
To bake something like cake or cookies you will need an ounce of milk.
strawberry
The nouns in the sentence are:theatremovies
Depends where it is in the sentence. "The birthday girl and I are going to eat cake." "Give the cake to the birthday girl and me." If it helps with compound subjects or nouns like this, imagine taking out the noun that isn't "I" or "me."
yes like of course
He liked cake perfered strawberry
You can use a strawberry flavoring, about a tablespoon or teaspoon depending on the effect you would like to create. You could also use a strawberry jello filling or add a strawberry Kool-aid packet into a white cake mix. You should probably experiment for yourself on how it works best for you, adding a little of this and that.
The nouns in the sentence are: elephants, ears, and fans.
The nouns in the sentence are:peoplesmellfoodsgrassrain
i like funnel cake
Example questions that are answered by nouns:What is your name?Where did you go to school?Would you like chocolate or strawberry?
There is a particular type of cake i like.
No, the word 'seems' is the third, person, singular, present of the verb 'seem' (to appear to be; to give the outward appearance of being; to pretend to be).A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.Example: Jack seems to like the movie. (the nouns in the sentence are 'Jack', a person, and 'movie' a thing)