'Statue of Lincoln' is not a sentence (there is no verb), it's a phrase. The nouns are statue and Lincoln.
There are no proper nouns in the sentence. The noun in the sentence, statues, is not the name of a specific statue.
The subject is one of the two main parts (subject and predicate) of a sentence; a subject noun is usually the first noun in a sentence and is what the rest of the sentence is about. Example:Marie was very thirsty. (Marie is the subject noun)The statue was a pale green, evidence that it is made of bronze. (statue is the subject noun)The movie was okay but the popcorn was better. (a compound sentence with a subject noun for each part, movie and popcorn are both subject nouns in this sentence)
Daniel Chester created Abraham Lincoln's statue
The nouns in your sentence are group, nouns, and sentence.
Four nouns (synonyms) for Abraham Lincoln are:manhusbandfathercitizen
The two nouns, 'nouns' and 'sentence' are placed correctly in your sentence.
In the question above, nouns and sentence are the only nouns. Neither of which are proper nouns.
Daniel Chester French designed the statue and the Piccirilli Brothers sculpted the final product with refinements added by French.
The nouns in the sentence are frogs, place, and place.
A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples (nouns in bold):My daughter takes ballet.We had a picnic at the park.Jack attends Lincoln High School.Mother made cookies for the party.The car broke down on the bridge.
standing lincoln
French did the Lincoln statue in the Lincoln Memorial.