"Dropped." When looking for a verb, look for the action.
"I dropped my book and it landed on the floor with a loud thud."
The noun in the sentence "the boy dropped his book" is "boy." It is the subject of the sentence and the main noun referring to the person performing the action.
Subject: each student Verbs: has brought Objects: his book, paper, pencil Prepositional phrase: to class
the book with loads of adjectives and verbs
To rewrite a sentence as imperative, simply remove the subject and any helping verbs. For example, "Please bring me the book" can be rewritten as "Bring me the book."
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'book' is it.The pronoun 'it' is a subject pronoun or an objectpronoun.Example:I bought the book at the tag sale.It was only fifty cents. (subject of the sentence)You may have it when I finish it. (direct object of the verbs)
Sure! Here is an example of ten verbs in a sentence: "She quickly ran to the store, bought some groceries, cooked dinner, ate with her family, cleaned the dishes, read a book, watched TV, and finally went to bed."
I laid my book on the table. Laid is a regular verb. The forms are lay laid laid.
Transitive verbs require a direct object to make sense in a sentence, while intransitive verbs do not have a direct object. For example, "She is reading a book" is transitive (reading requires an object - book), while "She sleeps peacefully" is intransitive (sleeping does not require an object).
The nouns in the sentence are:book, direct object of the verb 'dropped'door, object of the preposition 'near'
I jumped with a start at the loud noise but it was merely a book that had slipped to the floor.
No. The word "he" is a pronoun. The antecedent would be the word that "he" referred to, as in the sentence "Bob dropped the book as he ran for the bus" where "he" refers to Bob.