The boys from Mayberry enjoy fishing.
boys = common noun, plural noun
Mayberry = proper noun
fishing = gerund
An example sentence with a proper noun (Jane), a concrete noun (sign), and an abstract noun (idea):Jane has a great idea for our sign.
The word 'comestible' is a noun. A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Example: The table was spread with all types of comestibles. (object of the preposition 'of')
The only concrete noun in your sentence is sentence. Note: The noun 'sentence' is a concrete noun only for a written or spoken sentence; the noun 'sentence' as a word for a penalty imposed for a crime conviction is an abstract noun.
Types of sentences:imperativeThis type of sentence is a command.Example: Close the window now!declarativeThis type of sentence gives information. It is the most common of all three sentence types.Example: It's raining outside.interrogativeThis sentence type asks a question.Example: Where is the nearest gas station?
Yes, because you have a verb and a noun. "It is", is even a sentence.
A pronoun takes the place of a noun in a sentence and a gerund, a verbal noun, can be used for all of the functions of a noun as the subject of a sentence or clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.
There are three nouns, two of them abstract nouns. Loyalty, honesty and friend are all nouns.
subject noun
The noun in the sentence is students. The subject 'all' is an indefinite pronoun; the words 'here' and 'today' are adverbs modifying the verb 'are'.
Highest and oldest are not nouns in that sentence or at all. They are adjectives because they describe a noun. A noun is a person, place, thing, or idea. Capital is the noun in this sentence.
It could be all three depending how it is used in the sentence. As a word by itself tickets is a plural noun.
There is NO possessive noun in the sentence: All the traffic gave him fits.