The word 'Basketball' is a noun; a singular, common noun; a word for a thing.The noun 'basketball' is an abstract noun as a word for a game or a sport.
The noun 'basketball' is a concrete noun as a word for a ball used to play the game or sport.
The noun 'basketball' can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, or the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:
subject: The basketball flew over the fence.
object: We all got new uniforms for basketball.
No, the word basketball is not a proper noun and so it does not get capitalized in a sentence unless it is the first word of that sentence.
The word basketball is a noun for a thing, not a pronoun. The word basketball is a singular, common, compound, concrete noun.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. For example:The basketball is in the garage, I put itaway.
That would be the subject of the sentence.
There are two nouns, strawberry and cake.A noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun.
Yes, the word basketball is a singular, common, compound noun; an abstract noun as the word for the game basketball; a concrete noun as the word for the ball for basketball. The noun basketball is a word for a thing.
Subject
No, the term 'basketball team' is a singular compound noun.The noun 'basketball' is functioning as an attributive noun to describe the noun 'team', playing the role of an adjective.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.The standard use of the collective noun 'team' is 'a team of players'.Collective nouns are an informal part of language, any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun; for example, 'a team of basketball players' or 'a tournament of basketball teams'.
subject noun
The nouns in the sentence are:girls', a plural possessive noun used to modify the noun 'basketball team'basketball, compound noun used as an attributive noun used to describe the noun 'team'team, singular, common noun, subject of the sentencefirst place, singular, common, compound noun, direct object of the verb 'won'
Example sentence for the noun manitou: The Algonquins called upon the manitou at special ceremonies.
A noun or noun phrase that is replaced by a pronoun later in the sentence is called an antecedent. The pronoun refers back to the antecedent to avoid repetition and maintain clarity in the sentence.
The pronoun in the sentence is you, a word that takes the place of the noun (name) for the person spoken to.The pronoun 'you' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person.