crash
It can be. It can also be a subject. It depends on how it is used in a sentence. subject - The noise continued all day. direct object - He heard a noise in the room.
Poor - adjective shepherds - subject heard - predicate the - article songs - direct object of - preposition the - article angels - object of the preposition
A heard of rhino is called a crash or a heard.
The word 'music' is a noun.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb (direct or indirect) or a preposition. A noun also functions as a predicate nominative.Examples:The music from the block party filled the neighborhood. (subject of the sentence)I couldn't decide which music to play. (subject of the relative clause)I heard music coming from his room. (direct object of the verb 'heard')Grandma tapped her foot to the music. (object of the preposition 'to')The manager's compliment was music to my ears. (predicate nominative)
The word 'applause' is a noun, a word for approval shown by clapping hands; a word for any positive expression of appreciation or approval; a word for a thing.A noun can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, as the object of a verb or a preposition, as a predicate noun (subject complement), and as an object complement.Examples:The applause from the stadium was heard blocks away. (subject of the sentence)He was silenced by the roar that the applause generated. (subject of the relative clause)We heard applause coming from the board room. (direct object of the verb 'heard')The audience responded with applause. (object of the preposition 'with')The sound you hear is the applause of the fans. (predicate noun, sound = applause)The sound you hear is clapping, applause. (object complement, clapping = applause)
Heard he was in jail
i heard that the plane she was on crashed.
The noun 'story' can function as the nominative(subjective), objective or the genitive (possessive) case.Examples:The story is an old one. (subject of the sentence)Have you heard this story? (direct object of the verb 'have heard')This is the story's end. (possessive form)
A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The shout I heard came from behind the building. (subject of the sentence)The reaction that the shout produced was all heads turning. (subject of the relative clause)I heard the shout too. (direct object of the verb 'heard')We ran to look for the origin of the shout. (object of the preposition 'of')
[object Object]
Jesus christ man have you never heard of 9/11?
The worst one I have ever heard of was 1955 Le Mans crash where the driver and 84 spectators were killed