three lucky families
The nouns in the sentence are:mother's, a possessive noun (the partner of my mother);business, an attributive noun; a noun used as an adjective to describe the noun 'partner';partner, the subject of the sentence;vacation, the object of the preposition 'on'.Note: The word 'week' is a noun but it is part of the compound, complex adjective 'two-week' used to describe the noun 'vacation'.
Our family=subject went=verb on a safari=prepositional phrase in South Africa=prepositional phrase last summer=preposotional phrase ~The Sentence Analysis King
spot is the subject while vacation is the adjective.
Here is a sample sentence:1. "The grand aesthetics of the hotel made the vacation an amazing experience."This is active because aesthetics (the subject) is performing the action.
Yes, the word 'vacation' is a noun, a common noun; a general word for a period of respite from home or work; a word for any vacation of any kind.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A vacation is a thing.A common noun is a general word for any person, place, or thing. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.
No it is not. The pronoun 'she' is a subject pronoun:She went on vacation. (subject of the sentence)The pronoun 'her' is an object pronoun:She went on vacation with her. (object of the preposition 'with')If you want to use both people as the subject, use the plural subject pronoun:They went on vacation.
No, an employer in Florida does not have to pay accrued vacation time when you quit. That is if it in the company policy, it is not mandatory.
The nouns in the sentence are:mother's (possessive form, modifies 'business')business (subject of the sentence)two (attributive, modifies 'week')week (attributive, modifies 'vacation')vacation (object of the preposition 'on')
The sentence "you are having an enjoyable vacation" is a declarative sentence acting as a main clause with a subject ("you") and a verb phrase ("are having"). Its function is to state a fact or express an idea.
The sentence describes a compound subject, specifically a compound subject of a sentence as it consists of two separate subjects, "Gina" and "Sydney."
The nouns in the sentence are:2005, object of the preposition 'in';family, part of the compound subject of the sentence;Disney World (proper noun), object of the preposition 'to';vacation, object of the preposition 'for'.
Yes, subject to the restrictions both of the State of Texas and the State of Florida which they place on learner's permits.
Yes, the nouns in the sentence are:2005, object of the preposition 'in';family, part of the compound subject 'your family and you';Disney World, object of the preposition 'to';vacation, object of the preposition 'for'.
The nouns in the sentence are:mother's, a possessive noun (the partner of my mother);business, an attributive noun; a noun used as an adjective to describe the noun 'partner';partner, the subject of the sentence;vacation, the object of the preposition 'on'.Note: The word 'week' is a noun but it is part of the compound, complex adjective 'two-week' used to describe the noun 'vacation'.
Our family=subject went=verb on a safari=prepositional phrase in South Africa=prepositional phrase last summer=preposotional phrase ~The Sentence Analysis King
spot is the subject while vacation is the adjective.
Here is a sample sentence:1. "The grand aesthetics of the hotel made the vacation an amazing experience."This is active because aesthetics (the subject) is performing the action.