The noun in the sentence is school district (a compound noun).
Noun - person - Kari, place - school, or a thing - none in this sentence
The only noun in the sentence is babysitter, a closed compound noun.
A collective noun for schools is a district of schools.
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It depends on the context. If you were to use it like: "I am in the wrong school district." then it would not. But if you said: "School District 957 needs to be widened." then it would. So if it is a title, yes; and if it is just a noun, no.
The pronoun in the sentence "he went to school" is "he".
In the sentence, "Our work advanced the school's reputation", "Our" is a possessive case pronoun, "work" is a noun, "advanced" is a verb in its past tense, "the" is an article, "school's" is a noun in the possessive case, and "reputation" is a noun. "Our" and "school's" could alternatively be called "substantive adjectives."
The word 'school' is not a pronoun.The word 'school' is a noun (school, schools) and a verb (school, schools, schooling, schooled).A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'school' is it.Examples:The school is just one block from the house. (noun)A school of minnows glinted in the sunlight. (noun)I need to school myself in their culture so that I don't embarrass myself. (verb)I went to a school that specialized in science. I attended it for two years. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'school' in the second sentence)
The word 'school' is not a pronoun.The word 'school' is a noun (school, schools) and a verb (school, schools, schooling, schooled).A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'school' is it.Examples:The school is just one block from the house. (noun)A school of minnows glinted in the sunlight. (noun)I need to school myself in their culture so that I don't embarrass myself. (verb)I went to a school that specialized in science. I attended it for two years. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'school' in the second sentence)
There is no unclear reference in the sentence.The only pronoun in the sentence (they) clearly refers to 'this school district'.Perhaps the problem with the sentence is that a plural pronoun (they) is taking the place of a singular antecedent (this school district). However, it is often acceptable to use a plural pronoun to take the place of a singular noun that is a word for a number of people or things. Examples:The staff is off today. They are at a seminar.The team will be a little late. Their bus broke down.The herd got out of control. They trampled the corn field.
In 'That is our school.' the word 'that' is a demonstrative pronoun; a word that takes the place of a noun.In 'That school is ours.' the word 'that' is a demonstrative adjective, a word that describes the noun.Note that in the first sentence, 'our' is the possessive adjective form describing the noun school; in the second sentence 'ours' is the possessive pronoun, taking the place of the noun school.
The words 'closed' is not a noun. The word 'closed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to close. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The noun 'solid' is a word for something that has dimension, mass, and weight; a geometric figure with three dimensions; a food that is not a liquid.A noun is used as the subjectof a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.