The nouns in the sentence are:
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.
The nouns in the sentence, "Orion is a constellation in the night sky." are:Orion; proper noun, subject of the sentenceconstellation; common noun, predicate nominative, direct objectsky; common noun, object of the preposition 'in'
No. Sky is a noun, and either a noun adjunct or adjective when used with another noun (sky marshal).
The noun 'sky' is a count noun; the plural noun is skies.Examples:A flock of geese flew across the sky. (singular)The weather report is for sunny skies tomorrow. (plural)
The simple subject of the sentence "My talented sister drew a picture of the night sky" is "sister." It is the main noun that the sentence revolves around, while "my talented" serves as modifiers that provide more information about the sister.
The adjective in the sentence "you love the blue sky" is "blue". It describes the noun "sky".
"The sky is blue."
There are two common, concrete nouns in the sentence, birds and sky.The noun 'birds', a plural noun, is the subject of the sentence.The noun 'sky', a singular noun, is the object of the preposition 'in'.
Unless "the blue" is followed by a noun (e.g. the blue sky), blue is a noun, and the is an article.(e.g. the idiom into the blue, meaning parts unknown, literally the sky).
The sky is blue.
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.
the sky was hues of blue
the water is blue. i like blue colour. the sky is blue
Both moon and sky are nouns in that sentence.
The pronoun that replaces the noun 'sky' is it. Example:Look at the sky, it is clear and blue.
"The sky's stars seemed illuminated." The sky's blue.
"The sky's usual color is a shade of blue."