People, quilts, hand
A dictionary would be a good place for you to research such a lengthy question/answer.
It is correct as far as it goes.The full sentence would be:I have as many books as you do.The obverse would be:You have as many books as I.This is correct, but again, the full sentence would be:You have as many books as I do.
The word 'in' would be a preposition in the example sentence you gave.
Some synonyms for the adjective 'flippant' are: arrogant, disrespectful, and cheeky. It's basically used to describe an individual who is very flighty. Grammatically speaking, however, adjectives do not describe other adjectives. They describe nouns. To describe the adjective flippant in a sentence, one would need an adverb. Example: extremely flippant.
This sentence is grammatically correct the way it is written. There is nothing wrong with it. Some people would probably prefer "A person needs coordination in order to dance well", but others see "in order" as unnecessary and redundant.
Yes it would.
The nouns in the sentence are:General Harry LeeMotteAmericanshomeenemy
The nouns in the sentence are:EmmaroleplayschoolThe word 'lead' is an adjective describing the noun 'role'.
They are not proper nouns. They would not be capitalized in a sentence.
The nouns in the sentence are: nouns and sentence.
For the sentence: "Doomore the dinosaur slept in a cave.", Doomore and dinosaur would be the only nouns. There are no pronouns in this sentence, unless you changed "slept in a cave" to "slept in his cave" or "slept in its cave".
Well, nouns are people, places, things or ideas. Therefore, the noun in this sentence would most likely be camping. the subject.... I think would be "100 to 150 miles"
No, "navy" should not be capitalized in the sentence "general navy training." Capitalization is only used for proper nouns, such as specific names of people, places, or organizations.
If there are no proper nouns in a sentence, it may lack specific names or references to unique entities, making it more general and less precise in identifying particular individuals, places, or things. The sentence may still convey meaning but would be less detailed or distinctive without proper nouns.
No. You capitalize titles and proper nouns, but you treat a quote as you would any written sentence.
No, "who'd" is a contraction of "who would" or "who had" and is not a pronoun. Pronouns are words that can replace nouns in a sentence, such as he, she, they, etc.
um nothing