are
cirrus clouds are clouds that are in the sky.
No, there is no possessive noun in the sentence. The nouns in the sentence are:clouds, a plural, common, concrete noun, subject of the sentencesky, a singular, common, concrete noun, object of the verb 'dot'.A possessive noun is a form of a noun that shows that something in the sentence belongs to that noun. The possessive form is shown by use of an apostrophe s ('s) at the end of a noun or just an apostrophe (') at the end of a plural noun already ending with s. Example:The sky's horizon was dotted with white clouds.The clouds' whiteness dotted the blue sky.
clouds are clean.
What kind of clouds are covering the sky on weekends
The rain clouds that accompany a warm front are primarily nimbostratus clouds. Once we flew through the thin nimbostratus layer, the sky above was bright and blue.
cirrus clouds are clouds that are in the sky.
the answer is are
'Has seen' is the verb phrase.
Hide
The sky was bristling with clouds.
See those wondrous clouds in the sky!
Her fingers stretched out to the sky as if reaching for the clouds.
The phrase 'sky on' cannot be used as a phrase in a sentence.
Clouds. But technically it is falling from the sky, from clouds in the sky.
The word "SEE" in the sentence is the base form of the verb "to see". Verbs have both form and tense. In this sentence, "see" is used in the present tense.
Children tried to race the clouds as they scudded across the sky
There are more new things under the sky than you can imagine. We sat out under the sky and watched clouds.