goldfish
Well a compound sentences is 2 simple sentences put together as one sentence by putting a connective inbetween. Examples: 2 simple sentences: I went to the shop. I bought an apple a connective: and/but/however/although Sentence together: I went to the shop and I bought an apple. So in a compound sentence you need atleast 2 simple sentences and a connective.
If you mean - make a sentence with the word shoal, then: "The waves crashed on the shoal" Or it can refer to a group of fish as in "a shoal of tuna"
He loves fish and the sea and has decided to make oceanography his college major.
When my dad is mad, you can hear the upwelling in his voice.
You can't catch ammonia. You can catch pneumonia. Ammonia: a pungent colorless gaseous alkaline compound of nitrogen and hydrogen NH3 that is very soluble in water and can easily be condensed to a liquid by cold and pressure . Only a fish, or fish-like creature can catch it, so don't worry.. unless you have gills!
The conjunction in the sentence is and, which joins the compound object of the preposition 'in'.
Jam and fish or Jellyfish
Yes, fish in this sentence is a noun.In the example sentence, the noun fish is part of the noun phrase 'catching fish', which is the subject of the sentence.
blendable fish means that there has to be two different colors in order for the color to blend (red fish+ blue fish= purple fish). If they are the same color, a blendable fish will also be that color (red fish + red fish= red fish). overall it is still a surprise at how much the color blends especially if the fish has multiple colors.
yes if you put it together like this fishsticks
No it is not.
Some fish will get more pale in color and some will not chand\ge in color
gold fish
The conjunction "and" is mainly used to do three things: 1. Separate two independent clauses. 2. Separate two parts of a compound subject. 3. Separate two parts of a compound predicate. 1. An independent clause is a clause that can express a complete thought and stand alone. e.g. "I eat fish." However, when more than one independent clause is one sentence, not using and will cause a run-on sentence. e.g. "I eat fish he eats ham." To rectify this, and is used like this: "I eat fish, and he eats ham." 2. A subject is the "do-er" of the sentence. The subject performs the verb. In "I eat fish," I is the subject. When you want multiple subjects to perform the same verb in the sentence, and is used. "Bob Martha eat fish." This makes it seem that Bob's surname is Martha. Instead... "Bob and Martha eat fish. 3. The predicate is the action of the sentence. Its use is mostly the same as #2. "I ate ran." "I ate and ran."
A Watermelon Green fish
Fish come in every color you can imagine. There are even some fish whose bodies are totally transparent!
"Goldfish" is a compound word that combines "gold" and "fish."