"I washed my clothes but I couldn't wash yours."
The pronouns in the sentence are:
The pronoun 'yours' is a possessive case pronoun (a possessive pronoun), a word that takes the of a noun (clothes) belonging to you.
Washed
The pronouns in this sentence are the words "you" and "them".
Yes. If you split the sentence, the noun or pronoun should carry 2 sentences. She washed the shells. She dried them in the sun. Compound Sentence: She washed the shells and dried them in the sun.
C. A has a compound subject and a simple predicate. B has a compound subject and a simple predicate. C has two verbs for the subject: Sandy washed and Sandy ironed. D has a simple subject ("we") and a simple verb ("went").
The word washed is not a noun. The word washed is the past participle, past tense of the verb to wash. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, a word to describe a noun. Examples:Verb: I washed the laundry.Adjective: I'm putting the washed clothes into the dryer.The noun forms for the verb to wash are washer and the gerund, washing; both common nouns.The word wash is a noun form, a common noun; a word for something waiting to be washed, being washed, having been washed; a word for the water or air disturbed by a moving boat or aircraft; a word for a layer of paint or metal spread thinly on a surface.
Washed and ironed the clothes.
Washed
The clothes smell bad and need to be washed.
Now that I have washed the car, it is certain to rain. I washed my clothes yesterday.
No. Clothing is washed in the location where they are.
clothes that are to be washed and iron
They washed their clothes in the river
Until the clothes are washed.
The pronouns in this sentence are the words "you" and "them".
They washed them in a river.
in the laundry
the dryer obviously ...