Yes, it's possible.
Examples with nouns highlighted.
The teachers and students are outside.
His jacket and shirt are in the suitcase.
Her favorite fruits are grapes and pears.
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance", a relative clause which relates to the subject noun "worry".
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance", a relative clause which relates to the subject noun "worry".
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance".This relative clause functions as an appositive (a word or phrase renaming something earlier in the sentence). This relative clause 'relates' to the noun 'worry', the subject of the sentence.
The one noun in the sentence is bus.
Example sentence for common noun (teacher), proper noun (John), and abstract noun (diligence):The teacher complimented John on his diligence.
There is one noun in the sentence, bumper cars, a compound noun.
There is one noun in the sentence: TanyaThe noun Tanya is a proper noun, the name of a specific person;the noun Tanya is the subject of the sentence.
Example sentence: Curiosity killed the cat.curiosity is an abstract noun, a word for a desire, an emotion.cat is a concrete noun, a word for a physical creature.
A simplistic sentence is a sentence that contains one action and one noun. "I ran." Is and example for a simplistic sentence.
The noun is "one." It can also be a pronoun in other uses.
The word microcosm is a noun. A sentence using this word would be, 'The editor of the daily newspaper portrayed one man's life as a microcosm of war.'
Yes, fish in this sentence is a noun.In the example sentence, the noun fish is part of the noun phrase 'catching fish', which is the subject of the sentence.