The possessive noun is farmer's, showing the the wheat belongs to the farmer.
The singular possessive noun in the sentence is:farmer's (the 's indicates that the wheat belongs to the farmer; one farmer)
Yes, wheat bread is a common noun; a singular, common, concrete, open compound noun.
The word 'loaves' is the plural form of the noun'loaf', a word for a shape for a quantity of dough to bake into bread; a word for any food formed in this shape for cooking or serving; a word for a thing.The word 'loaf' is also a verb, meaning to to spend time idling, doing nothing; a word for an action (or lack thereof).The noun forms of the verb to loaf are loafer and the gerund, loafing.
That they are very poor, little money, little food and no prospects The bread line means they are standing in line to get free bread (and other food) -- thus the meaning.
Little bread rolls.
The singular possessive noun in the sentence is:farmer's (the 's indicates that the wheat belongs to the farmer; one farmer)
No, the pronoun 'hers' is a possessive pronoun; a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to a female. A possessive pronoun can function as a subject or an object.The possessive pronouns are: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.Examples:Hers is the red convertible.The car with the duct tape is mine.
they are little pieces of bread
Bread and fruit. Also meat and beer.
they ate bread
Yes, wheat bread is a common noun; a singular, common, concrete, open compound noun.
Usually bread and whatever the farmers harvested:)
The word 'loaves' is the plural form of the noun'loaf', a word for a shape for a quantity of dough to bake into bread; a word for any food formed in this shape for cooking or serving; a word for a thing.The word 'loaf' is also a verb, meaning to to spend time idling, doing nothing; a word for an action (or lack thereof).The noun forms of the verb to loaf are loafer and the gerund, loafing.
it was selectively bred by early farmers
The plural form for the noun loaf is loaves; the plural possessive form is loaves'.Consider this example:The chef complained that the loaves' crusts were too thick.
"(The slice of) toasted bread" may be an English equivalent of "il crostino."Specifically, the masculine singular definite article "il" means "the." The masculine singular noun "crostino" means "toasted bread, crouton." Its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "eel kroh-STEE-noh."
The most important crop grown by Egyptian farmers was grainn. Grain was used to make bread, beer, and porridge.