A house in Africa is an African house.
The word African is a proper adjective to describe the common noun house.
House
House africa
House
Africa
Casa
house
Nouns for ten things found around my house are:kitchenbathroomdining room tablebedlampschairswindowsrugfoodsoapfish
There are four nouns. Hull House is a proper noun, victims is a plural noun, and poverty and sickness are both abstract nouns.
House State Street
The possessive nouns in the sentence are:Frank'sSue'sThe pronoun in the sentence is 'his', a possessive adjective describing the noun 'house'.
Verbs don't describe nouns. Adjectives describe nouns.
The nouns in the sentence are "house," "distance," and "homes."
Nouns for ten things found around my house are:kitchenbathroomdining room tablebedlampschairswindowsrugfoodsoapfish
The common nouns in the sentence are:houseschool
There are four nouns. Hull House is a proper noun, victims is a plural noun, and poverty and sickness are both abstract nouns.
House State Street
The nouns in the sentence are:Henryhippotophouse
Pronouns are considered a separate category of words from common and proper nouns. They serve as substitutes for nouns and can function as subjects, objects, or possessives in a sentence.
Common nouns: chair, cat, city, book Proper nouns: London, Starbucks, Harry Potter, Statue of Liberty
The Africa House has 380 pages.
Yes, "Bob's House" is a noun phrase because it comprises a noun ("house") and the possessive pronoun "Bob's," indicating ownership or relationship.
The Africa House was created on 2000-06-01.
New Africa House was created in 1948.