Therer are two nouns. Both cat and tree are nouns.
It takes the place of a noun. In the sentence "The cat ran", the pronoun "it" can be used to replace "the cat" to make the sentence "It ran."
The pronoun "that" in the sentence refers to the cat that climbed the tree.
"Feet" is the plural noun in "The cat hurt its front feet."
A noun is either a person, place, or thing, and the verb is an action.Lets use this simple sentence as an example:The cat chases the mice.The nouns in this sentence are 'cat' and 'mice'.The verb in this sentence is 'chases'.When trying to find the verb, take the first noun and ask yourself "what is it doing"?For example: "What is the cat doing?".The answer is: The cat chases.
The complete subject of this sentence is "The cat." Everything from "purred" on is part of the predicate. The cat did what? Purred. How? With pleasure. At what? At the visitor's skill.
The plural noun in the sentence is feet (plural of the noun 'foot').
The nouns in the sentence are:Martha - proper noun; subject of the sentence.cat - common noun, direct object of the verb 'adores'.
In the sentence, "Jenny was sitting beside the tree." the prepositional phrase is "beside the tree."
The cat was stuck in the enormous tree.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun so you could say:"The cat was very playful"Cat is the noun and playful is the adjective.
Spoils
A video of a cat skidding across tiles went viral.