I have finished the race.
Sentence A contains a collective noun. The phrase "a large litter of puppies" uses "litter" as a collective noun to refer to a group of puppies born at the same time. Sentence B does not contain any collective nouns.
The nouns in the sentence are dad and ladders.
Old is relative.
The noun is "one." It can also be a pronoun in other uses.
A pronoun sentence is a sentence that uses a pronoun to replace a noun. For example, instead of saying "John is going to the store," you could say "He is going to the store." An adjective sentence, on the other hand, is a sentence that uses an adjective to describe a noun. For example, "The cat is black" is an adjective sentence because it uses the adjective "black" to describe the noun "cat."
The sentence contains 2 nouns - "seamstress" and "tape measure".
'Dream' can be both a common noun and a verb. Common nouns refer to general items, while proper nouns refer to specific items. For example, "I had a dream" uses 'dream' as a common noun, but "Martin Luther King Jr.'s 'I Have a Dream' speech" uses 'dream' as a proper noun.
Discharge can be a verb or a noun. "We did not know when they would discharge him from the hospital" uses "discharge" as a verb. "Watch for increased inflammation or any discharge" uses "discharge" as a noun.
The blanket's color uses the possessive form of blanket to refer to its color.
The book's spine cracked as she opened it.
They are very useful. They modify and provide more information about the noun in a sentence.