A sentence using the word collection is.... <---
Yes, the compound word 'rock collection' is the noun in the sentence. The noun 'rock collection' is a word for a thing.
sentence is the collection of words.
No, the word "he" is not a possessive adjective. The word "his" would be the word that shows possession. An example sentence: Bobby decided to auction off his baseball card collection. In this sentence many words modify the noun "collection," but the one that shows who owns it (possession) is the word "his."
My anthology has a collection of Native American stories.
There was a bewildering collection of curiosities filling the room.
The diamonds adorning your neck are from your grandmother's collection.
My collection of old Swiss Army knives is extensive.
He had an arsenal of guns inside of his home. This sentence works because it describes a large collection of weapons.
La collecte is the French word for collection. My collection is, ma collecte. Your collection is votre collecte.
Catalog is the collection of items usually to sell them. This is a sentence using the word catalog.
Deviations from the norm could be aberrations induced by faulty collection methods.
A 'sentence' can mean two things: 1. A discrete collection of words or utterances relating to the same subject. 2. A legal punishment. Since I know of no standard legal sentence containing the word 'obfuscate', I assume your question relates to the former definition. Therefore, the answer would be: 'A discrete collection of words relating to the word 'obfuscate'.' Hope that helps.