Want this question answered?
The appositive phrase "a gift from her parents" is describing the noun "stereo system" in the sentence. It provides additional information about the stereo system by specifying that it was a gift from her parents.
The appositive in the sentence is the noun 'gift'.The appositive noun 'gift' is describing the noun stereo system.Note: The complete appositive is the phrase 'a gift from her parents' which restates the noun 'stereo system'.
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.The appositive phrase is little Sierra, which renames the noun phrase 'my neighbor'.
While you were busy abiding by your parents' silly rules, I dropped out of school and have been experiencing the wild side of life.
My neighbor's daughter, little Sierra, threw rocks through her parents' window.
Sara, my best friend, was given a gift by her parents.
Baby smurf doesn't have parents. Well, not any known parents. He was born and taken away and dropped in Smurfville.
"Grand Parents" would be parents that would very good, so a simple sentence could be: She had grand parents. You probably meant grandparents, which are the parents of parents, so a sentence for that could be: Her grandparents loved her.
Nouns in the sentence: Phil, parents, fear
All parents' care about there children.
when her parents dropped her in a pool and she floated
In the sentence, "Mary parents gave her a watch at her party." the noun Mary is the incorrect form. The noun 'Mary' should be the possessive form to show that the 'parents' are the parents of Mary.The correct sentence is: "Mary'sparents gave her a watch at her party."The nouns in the sentence are:Mary'sparentswatchparty