The nouns in the sentence are need, heart, and game.
However, the sentence is not worded well, it should read:
'You need to have a lot of heart to win the game.'
Now the word 'need' is used as a verb, and the nouns are heart and game.
A noun and a verb. "John ran" is a complete sentence because it contains both.
Yes, the word Tuesday is a proper noun in the sentence; Tuesday night is a compound noun.
The word heart is a noun, a singular, common noun. The noun heart can be concrete or abstract, depending on use; for example: Concrete noun: The doctor uses a stethoscope to listen to your heart. Abstract noun: We need to talk about it until we get to the heart of the matter.
If you want to express a thought, you need to form a sentence. To form a sentence you will need a noun or a pronoun for the subject of the sentence. A noun is a word for a person, place, or thing. A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. A noun or a pronoun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.
The subject of the noun clause "what you need" is you.
The nouns in the sentence are:gametennisgame
Yes
Noun, subject of the sentence: His play saved the game. Noun, object of the sentence: I saw a great play last night.
The simple subject in the sentence is "cards." It is the noun that the sentence is about.
The sentence would be, "This is Scott's new electronic game."
The term 'final game' is not a compound noun, it's an adjective noun combination, a noun phrase.A noun, a compound noun, and a noun phrase all function as a noun, as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.
IT- Subject Tugs- Verb, or predicate at, my, heart- Adjectives Strings- direct object, or noun