nick can be use for a noun or wise a name like John. Nick likes to eat dinner at seven o'clock every sunday.
I'm not sure what you are trying to say. As an English sentence it doesn't mean anything. Are you trying to say "Nick is the best student in English classes"?
nick jonas .
aSexy dog
Nick has been praying. Has goes with singular. Have goes with plural (including 'I')
Nick is my best friend (as a name of a person) You can nick the end of the pole (as in scratching or scuffing something) It was in the nick of time (as in a quick moment)
Ol' Saint Nick next gave me a wink.
As the train quickly approached, the man grabbed the lady from the railroad tracks, just in the nick of time.
"will" is the helping verb in the sentence "Nick will eat spaghetti for dinner." Will creates the future tense of eat.
Fortunately, I found my homework just in the nick of time.
"Nick never needs nine new notebooks."
The words 'Yesterday Nick visited and old village' is NOT a grammatically correct sentence for two reasons. First, the word 'and' is a connecting word to make a compound subject, compound verb, or compound sentence. Instead of 'and' in your sentence, you need one of three words: a, an, or the. Those three words are called articles of speech and come before nouns. Second, you need a comma after Yesterday. Note: you use 'an' before words beginning with a vowel.So the sentence should read:Yesterday, Nick visited an old village. (or the old village)Yesterday is an adverb.Nick is the nounan old village is the object phrasean is an articleold is an adjective modifying villagevillage is the object.You can also write the sentence: Nick visited an old village yesterday.
"The technology here is very advanced," Nick told Jeff as they toured the lab