Sunshine is a noun. Sunny would be an adjective.
Yes, because sunshine is a thing and all nouns are a person an thing or an building. :)
Sunshine is concrete. Even though it consists only of energy, that energy has a comparable degree of physical presence, and measurable, observable existence, to a solid object. It is not abstract.
It would be some kind of eclipse.
Not. The noun 'sunshine' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical thing that can be seen and its warmth felt. Abstract nouns are word for things that your five senses cannot detect. You can't see them, hear them, smell them, taste them, or touch them. They are words for things that you know, learn, think, understand, or feel emotionally.
yes sunshine is a concrete noun
The collective noun is a ray of sunshine.
In the sentence, "You are my sunshine.", there is no proper noun. you = second person pronoun are = verb my = possessive adjective sunshine = common noun
Sunshine is a noun. Sunny would be an adjective.
NOUN
Yes, because sunshine is a thing and all nouns are a person an thing or an building. :)
She has an iphone4
The noun 'kind' is an abstract noun. There is no form for kind that is a concrete noun.
Sunshine is concrete. Even though it consists only of energy, that energy has a comparable degree of physical presence, and measurable, observable existence, to a solid object. It is not abstract.
It would be some kind of eclipse.
Sunshine is not a Latin word. The word in Latin for sun is: sol. ( a masculine 3rd declension noun) There are various ways in which to express light and the sun, but no single word for sunshine.
She covered her eyes to protect them from the bright sunshine. A.brightB.eyesC.protectD.sunshine