tizztacular
Sarah is a proper name. It isn't an adjective.
Sarah
No. Injured is a past tense verb and an adjective. Verb: Sarah injured her arm. Adjective: Sarah has an injured arm.
A subject complement follows a linking verb and renames or describes the subject. A subject complement can be a noun, a pronoun, or an adjective.Example: Sarah Silverman is a comedian.Here, comedian renames Sarah Silverman, so comedian is the subject complement (Sarah Silverman = comedian).Example: Sarah Silverman is hilarious.Here, hilarious describes Sarah Silverman, so hilarious is the subject complement (Sarah Silverman = hilarious).
In the book "Sarah Bishop" by Scott O'Dell, you can find a quotation from Sarah herself in Chapter 3 where she says, "I'll make my way, Peter taught me how." This line showcases Sarah's determined and self-reliant nature. Additionally, in Chapter 1, the narrator describes Sarah as "like the wilderness" which reflects her independent and resilient character.
There are two nouns. The nouns are cat and claws. Sarah's is a proper noun in the possessive case, which acts as an adjective.
A subject complement follows a linking verb and renames or describes the subject. A subject complement can be a noun or an adjective. When this is more than complement (nouns, adjectives, or a combination) it is called a compound complement.Sarah Silverman is a comedian.Here, comedian renames Sarah Silverman, so comedian is the subject complement.Sarah Silverman is very funny.Here, hilarious describes Sarah Silverman, so hilarious is the subject complement.Sarah Silverman is a comedian and very funny.This is a compound subject complement, in this case a noun and an adjective. Phrases that act as nouns or adjectives can also be complements.Sarah Silverman is a comedian and certain to make you laugh.
No, the sentence does not have a misplaced modifier. The phrase "that Sarah had read" correctly describes the small book.
It is a poem that describes the pain and suffering of slavery in America.
The antecedent for the pronoun 'her' is a singularnoun for a female.The pronoun 'her' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific female as the object of a verb or a preposition.The pronoun 'her' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to a specific female.Example uses:Today is mother's birthday so I made a cake for her.personal pronoun, takes the place of the noun 'mother' as the object of the preposition 'for'.Suzi rides her bicycle to school.possessive adjective, describes the noun 'bicycle' as belonging to Suzi.
A possessive noun is a word that shows that something in the sentence belongs to that noun. To make a noun show possession, an apostrophe 's is added to the end of the word, or sometimes just the apostrophe is added to nouns that already end with 's'. For example:John's bike is blue and Mary's bike is red.Our dog's barking disturbs the neighbor's dog.The boss's glasses broke. I mean the glasses'frame broke.Also, there are two types of possessive pronoun.A possessive pronoun takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something. For example:The blue house near the corner is mine.A possessive adjective describes a noun that belongs to someone or something. A possessive adjective come just before the noun that it describes. For example:My house is the blue one near the corner.
because some were not buried