In that sentence your is an adjective, or a possessive pronominal adjective.
All can be: an adjective -- She ate all the cake a pronoun -- All of us went to the cinema together. an adverb -- He is all alone noun -- He gave all that he had but couldn't complete the race.
A nonessential phrase is a phrase in a sentence that doesn't need to be there. For example; The boy, who just ate dinner, wrote that story. No one needs to know that the boy just ate dinner. Who just ate dinner is a nonessential phrase.
In the sentence, "The dog ate a single biscuit." It is an adjective.In the sentence, "The boy made a single in the baseball game." It is a noun.Single is usually an adjective.
Canadian aboriginals ate fish kangaroos, people named joe because they didn;t like that name!
If there is a preposition in front of the pronoun used to describe yourself ("I" or "me"), use me. For instance, "Give the cookie to me". (You wouldn't say "Give the cookie to I.") Also, when listing people along with yourself, use "I". For example, "Kelly and I ate cookies." You can remember this by imagining the "Kelly and" part of the sentence disappearing. You wouldn't say "Me ate cookies" (unless you're Cookie Monster). Make sense? Always use "I" at the beginning of a sentence. At the end of a sentence it's tricky. If you can add "am or "do" after the word "I", than it's probably "I" and not me. "He is fatter than I."- sounds funny, but am can be omitted ("He is fatter than I am."). Listen to this now, "She wants the baby more than me." Sounds right but it implies that she prefers the baby doll over preferring me, so you would use the sentence "She wants the baby more than I" - which means she wants the baby doll more than I want the baby doll. Hope that helps.
Took is a verb.
It's not a complete sentence. It might be okay in a casual conversation where both speakers know what the subject and object of the sentence are: "What did John do with those fish?" "[John] Ate them ["those fish"] down by the river."
The pig ate from the trough. Trough is a noun.
when the chocolate ate the chicken and the chicken ate the fish and when the frog ate the chocolate which also ate the chicken that ate the fish when the frog ate the chocolate that ate the chicken that ate the fish when the frog ate the chocolate that ate the chicken that ate the fish!(:
she cooked the fish. he ate my foods.
They ate fish, meat, crops, and most likely chicken and eggs
Caught a fish, Ate a fish, Ate a cooked fish, Ate a cooked bird, Ate a coconut, Ate a banana, Gift of dance
he ate between bone bread cartoon ,down fish fried washed the slices down with some milk.
A bear that eats a fish that ate bugs that ate algae is a
The word circumnavigate is a verb. It means to completely travel around a place.
No where does it say that Jesus only ate fish. In fact, he ate what the common man ate.
Yes. To test sentence structure like this, say on part without the other in the sentence. For example, She ate pie. Her brother ate pie. Thus you could say she and her brother ate pie since it works if you remove the other subject.