The nouns in the sentence are:
The other words are:
The nouns in the sentence are "Gina," "street," and "crowd."
Yes. the word "along" is a preposition and sidewalk is its object noun. The prepositional phrase is "along the crowded sidewalk" and it modifies the verb "is hurrying" saying where the hurrying is taking place.
Along the tightrope.
An example of "along" used as a preposition is: "He walked along the beach." In this sentence, "along" shows the direction in which he walked, next to the beach.
A sign warned drivers of falling rocks along the street.
"alongside the lake"
Yes. the word "along" is a preposition and sidewalk is its object noun. The prepositional phrase is "along the crowded sidewalk" and it modifies the verb "is hurrying" saying where the hurrying is taking place.
"He walked along the beach."
in the street along the street depends on the sentence
She walked along with elegance.
An example of "along" used as a preposition is: "He walked along the beach." In this sentence, "along" shows the direction in which he walked, next to the beach.
"Along" is the preposition. Other prepositions include "of," "for," "under," "over," and "to."
I walked along a railroad embankment to reach the town
The prepositional phrase is "as you walked along the beach".
A sentence example could be, "The black cat was prowling along the dark, silent street."
A sign warned drivers of falling rocks along the street.
The nouns in the sentence are: sign, drivers, rocks, and street.
'Omar walked along the beach feeling the warm sun on his back' is a proper sentence.