No, a noun phrase is a noun or a group of words relating to a noun.
The words, 'Mum has...' is a noun and a verb, a clause (a group of words with a subject and a verb that is an incomplete thought).
The subject 'mum' is a noun phrase in itself, or:
'My own mum...' is a noun phrase.
'The other boy's mum...' is a noun phrase.
'The mum with the gold crown...' is a noun phrase.
No, "mum has" is not a noun phrase. It is a verb phrase where "has" is the verb and "mum" is the subject. A noun phrase is a group of words that functions like a noun in a sentence.
No, "she hid" is a verb phrase. It consists of the subject "she" and the action "hid." A noun phrase would include a noun as its main element, along with any associated modifiers.
Yes, "mum" is a common noun when used generically to refer to a mother in general. However, when used as a specific name for someone's mother, it becomes a proper noun, such as in "I told Mum about it."
"Mum" is a noun, specifically a common noun. It refers to a female parent. Pronouns are words that can replace nouns in a sentence (e.g., she, he, they), while nouns are the actual words that represent people, places, things, or ideas.
One example of a five letter suffix that could change a noun phrase to another noun is "-hood." For instance, adding "-hood" to "child" creates "childhood."
This is called a prepositional phrase. an example would be: on the deck. the preposition is "on". and the noun is deck.
Yes, it would.
Mum is a noun.
No, "she hid" is a verb phrase. It consists of the subject "she" and the action "hid." A noun phrase would include a noun as its main element, along with any associated modifiers.
Traditionally, the Direct Object is defined as the noun that immediately follows the verb (more precisely, the noun in the noun phrase that immediately follows the verb phrase). An indirect object is any noun that does NOT belong to the noun phrase immediately following the verb phrase. In the sentence above, 'license' (from the noun phrase "my license") would be the Indirect Object.
Yes, the word 'mum' is a common noun, a word for any mum of anyone; a word for any chrysanthemum anywhere.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing. So, if the mum is your mum, it's her title, you may use a capital M as a proper noun.
Yes, it would modify a noun (e.g. spot, mark).
Yes, "mum" is a common noun when used generically to refer to a mother in general. However, when used as a specific name for someone's mother, it becomes a proper noun, such as in "I told Mum about it."
"Mum" is a noun, specifically a common noun. It refers to a female parent. Pronouns are words that can replace nouns in a sentence (e.g., she, he, they), while nouns are the actual words that represent people, places, things, or ideas.
No, the noun 'mum' is a common noun, a general word for:a chrysanthemummother (although, if you capitalize the word 'mum' when referring to your own mother, no one should criticize you)A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing, such as Mum's Place (furniture store), Pacific Grove, CA or Mum Drive, Richardson TX. The word mum is also a verb and an adjective.
One example of a five letter suffix that could change a noun phrase to another noun is "-hood." For instance, adding "-hood" to "child" creates "childhood."
'In the box' is a noun phrase; the noun is box.
Hi The word "mum" as in mother, is a common noun.