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Yes, hamburger is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a thing.
The verb tastes is an action verb, a word for the act of tasting. He tastes the fudge before he buys it.The verb tastes can also be a linking verb, when the object of the sentence is a form of the subject: This fudge tastes good. (fudge = good)
The subject may be a noun phrase or a pronoun.I like ice cream. - pronoun subjectChocolate ice cream tastes good. - noun phraseThe subject can also be a clause.What I want is a cold drink.
The word "rarefied" can be used an adjective, to describe the quality of a noun in a sentence. Her group exhibits rarefied tastes.
Gravy is a noun so anything with A, And Or The in front of it is grammatically correct.Examples: I have sauce and gravy on my turkey.I have a small amount of gravy on my mashed potatoes.The gravy tastes good
The proper noun in the sentence "Naveen is a good boy" is the word "Naveen."
The possessive form of the noun hamburger is hamburger's.Example: My hamburger's bun isn't toasted, it's charred.
Today is a noun in that sentence.
A good example for a sentence would be: "A bone in my back broke."
Examples of Adjective Noun patterns are: The football team is good. (Football is the Adjective in this sentence, but, it can also be a Noun.) <--- Example: The football was sticky. (Football is now a Noun in this sentence.) The green eyes scared me! (Green is the Adjective in this sentence, but, it can also be a Noun.) <--- Example: Green is my favorite color. (Green is now the Noun in this sentence.)
if the bun on the hamburger yes because it is a thing and a thing person or place is a noun
That is the correct spelling of tastes (plural noun, or form of verb to taste, to sample)