The word "they" is a pronoun which is taking the place of the noun "salesmen" as the subject of the second part of the compound sentence.
The term 'Saturday afternoon' is a noun phrase, the noun 'afternoon' described by the noun 'Saturday'.A noun functioning as an adjective to describe another noun is called an attributive noun or a noun adjunct.The noun 'Saturday' is a proper noun, the name of a specific day of the week. A proper noun is always capitalized.The noun 'afternoon' is a common noun, a general word for a period of any day.A noun phrase is a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit in a sentence in any position that can be filled by a noun. Examples:Saturday afternoon is the class picnic. (subject of the sentence)We're going to the picnic on Saturday afternoon. (object of the preposition 'on')
The mayor of New York made an impromptu appearance at the trade union conference.
A pronoun takes the place of a noun in a sentence. Example:"When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train." The pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'George' in the second part of the sentence."We can go to the mall this afternoon." The pronoun 'we' takes the place of our names which are nouns.
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.
Yes. "Could show" is a verb phrase, even when another word appears inside it. This word order is commonly used only in questions; the corresponding statement form would be "Your dad could show us the video of the game".
Your persuasive argument seemed well-researched and compelling.
It depends on the sentence: You will be coming to the lab in the afternoon! Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon? This afternoon, you will be coming the the lab, won't you?
The nouns are: team, practice, and afternoon.
I enjoyed a relaxing cup of tea on the porch one sunny afternoon.
I have piano class in the afternoon
This afternoon you are coming to the Laboratory.
"End" and "afternoon" are the nouns.
The afternoon was warm and quiet, just the way I like it.
No, I prefer: "I am coming to the laboratory this afternoon."
"End" and "afternoon" are the nouns.
How can you fix this sentence? The best of luck With the "Planning For Yourselves" conference.
Yes, the phrase "this afternoon after breakfast" is a run-on sentence because it contains two independent clauses without proper punctuation or conjunction to connect them. To correct it, you could separate the clauses into two sentences or add a conjunction like "and" or "so."