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No, the sentence has no abstract nouns, it has no nouns at all. she = pronoun (subject of the sentence) thought = verb you = pronoun (subject of the dependent clause) should have left = verb earlier = adverb (modifies the verb 'left')
Sentences using 'band" as a noun.She wore a gold band on her left hand.He plays the trumpet in the marching band.
A noun is a naming word. The nouns in the sentence are therefore men, fish, gulf and Mexico.
In the sentence:The word 'choir' is often a collective noun, but in this sentence it's not used as a collective noun; it is a singular, common noun and the subject of the sentence.The main verb is 'left' with the auxiliary verb 'has'; 'has left' is the complete verb.
a. They did a good job planning the party.the abstract nouns are job and party.d. Respect must be earned.the abstract noun is respect.
it was coincidental that we got to the party at the same time even though we left first.
Adjective
Click on TRUE on the bottom left corner - this is not a question as there is no '?' at the end, it's just a statement that the word 'WHAT' is the first one in the sentence.
The adjective in the sentence 'you finally left and had a fun day' is left & fun.
1,336.
They are phrases used as adjectives or adverbs and contain a proposition (such as in, on, at, to, or of) followed by a noun, or noun phrase, which is the object of the preposition.Example:The man in the boat waved. (adjective phrase - modifies man)The top of the wall is painted. (adjective phrase - modifies wall)They left in the morning. (adverb phrase - modifies left)They went to town. (adverb phrase - modifies went)
When writing a film script, the first words in the script are fade-in, in all caps and positioned at the left margin.