In the sentence "The clamor on the playground drew the attention of the principal," the highlighted word "clamor" functions as a noun. It refers to a loud and confused noise, which is the subject of the sentence.
To determine the part of speech of the highlighted word "decree," I would need to see the sentence in which it appears. Generally, "decree" can function as a noun (referring to an official order) or as a verb (meaning to officially order something). If you provide the sentence, I can give a more specific answer.
he was very antisocial because he doesnt speak towards others and keeps quiet to himself.
Snowing - is present tense For example: "it is snowing" - is the current action taking place "it was snowing" a moment a go - is an action that has already occured. In other words it "snowed" but it is not "snowing" right now. Critics and school teachers do not like it see people use "it was snowing" they prefer the use of the phrase " it snowed" or "it has snowed" for speaking of actions that have already taken place.
A sentence missing a subject or a verb is a fragment.
It's the word that describes the noun in the sentence.
The highlighted word "clamor" functions as a noun in the sentence. It refers to a loud and persistent noise or commotion on the playground that attracted the principal's attention.
Either can be correct, depending on its use in a sentence: "Mel and I are at the playground" or "She found Mel and me at the playground."
In the sentence "The little children raced around the playground," the prepositional phrase is "around the playground." A prepositional phrase typically consists of a preposition ("around") and its object ("the playground"), providing additional information about the action in the sentence.
If you take out the prepositional phrase, the sentence will still make sense. A prepositional phrase contains a preposition, a noun, and usually an article or other adjective. "The little children raced around the playground." If you take out "around the playground", the sentence would still make sense. The word "around" is the preposition and "playground" is the noun that is the object of the preposition. Therefore, "around the playground" is the prepositional phrase in this sentence.
I played in the playground but jack went to the skate park
She was very whimsical when she was playing in the playground.
Building the playground was a communal project.
The principal is my pal.
"found"
The playground is very dirty
"I sent you to the principal because you misbehaved."
" The principal of the matter may vary"