Galaxy
Produces is the verb.
No, "sky" is a noun referring to the atmosphere or space above the Earth where clouds, the sun, moon, and stars are usually seen. It is not a verb.
The term 'at the stars' is a prepositional phrase; the noun 'stars' is the object of the preposition 'at'. This prepositional can modify a verb in a sentence, making it an adverbial phrase. Examples:Matt looked at the stars.Matt threw the snowball at the stars on the billboard.Or this phrase can modify a noun in a sentence, making it an adjective phrase. Examples:Matt took a look at the stars.
No, "fifty stars" is not an adverb. It is a noun phrase describing a specific quantity of stars. An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb by providing more information about how, when, or where something happens.
The word 'stars' is a noun, the plural from for the noun 'star'. Example sentence:The stars seem much brighter in the countryside away from the city lights.The word 'stars' is also a verb (star,stars, starring, starred); and an adjective (a star athlete, a star performer, etc.)
Produces is the verb.
verb group
A complete sentence is a group of words with both a subject and a verb.
A noun and a verb in a group of words.
look
group can be a verb or noun the noun is: iqoqo the verb is: hlela ngamaqoqo See related links below:
A phrase is a group of words that does not contain a subject and a verb. It functions as a single unit in a sentence.
No Gaggle is a group of geese or other fowl .It is an adjective.
Stars is a plural noun (whether it be referring to stars in the sky or Hollywood stars) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of star).
no. verb implies action "them" is a pronoun implying a group of people
A group of related words containing a subject and verb is a sentence.
Acting or pretending.