The word his is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; his is a possessive pronoun that show something belongs to a male person. The word his is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun. Example:
Possessive pronoun: Jim lost a math book, this one must be his.
Adjective: Jim lost his math book.
See the link below for the difference between the pronoun and the adjective.
No, "his" is a possessive pronoun that shows ownership or association with a male subject. It is not a noun in itself.
The noun "noun" is the subject of the sentence "A noun can be a person, place, or thing."
Noun - person - Kari, place - school, or a thing - none in this sentence
Please provide the sentence for me to analyze the number of common nouns.
The noun subject of a sentence is the person, place, thing, or idea that is performing the action described by the verb. It is typically located at the beginning of the sentence and is what the rest of the sentence is centered around.
The subject of the sentence typically contains a noun.
The only concrete noun in your sentence is sentence. Note: The noun 'sentence' is a concrete noun only for a written or spoken sentence; the noun 'sentence' as a word for a penalty imposed for a crime conviction is an abstract noun.
The only concrete noun in your sentence is sentence. Note: The noun 'sentence' is a concrete noun only for a written or spoken sentence; the noun 'sentence' as a word for a penalty imposed for a crime conviction is an abstract noun.
In the sentence, horse is the only noun, and it is the subject of the sentence.
The noun is tree, a word for a thing.
The first noun in a sentence may be the subject of the sentence, but NOT ALWAYS, for example:John sat on the bench. (the noun 'John' is the subject of the sentence)He sat on the bench. (the pronoun 'he' is the subject of the sentence, the first noun in the sentence is 'bench', the object of the preposition 'on')
Please provide the sentence for me to analyze the number of common nouns.
The noun in the sentence is Cindy; a proper noun, the name of a person; the subject of the sentence.
The noun in the sentence is school district (a compound noun).
Noun sentence: Jane is nice.Pronoun sentence: She is nice.adjective sentence: Warm is nice.
The noun in the sentence is well.
The subject is the word (noun or pronoun) that the sentence is about.
The noun in the sentence is musicians.