If you mean article or determiner by noun marker, the answer is no. Plural and uncountable nouns can be used without a determiner.
Elephants like water.
This question makes no sense in English as the language does not have noun markers.
In Japanese or Tagalog then yes. Nouns do require markers in these languages.
no! mile marker is not a proper noun. a proper noun HAS TO BE capitalized.
First, the pronouns need to agree-- I am holding a marker in "my" left hand. In this sentence, the word "my" and the word "left" become adjectives, because they are describing the noun "hand." If you wanted to describe the other noun (marker), you could say you were holding a "yellow" marker or a "large" marker. An adjective tells us more about the noun it is modifying.
A noun marker is an article, a determiner, or a quantifier; one of those little words that precede and modify nouns.A determiner can be the definite article 'the' or the indefinite articles 'a' or 'an'.A determiner can be a possessive adjective: my, your, his, her, its, our, their, or whose.A determiner can be a demonstrative pronoun: this, that, these, or those.A quantifier tells us how many or how much:each, everyeither, neithersome, any, nomuch, many, more, mostlittle, less, leastfew, fewer, fewestwhat, whatever, which, whicheverall, both, halfseveralenough
Words that indicate that a noun will follow are:articles; the, a, anadjectives; examples, hot, big, yellow, soft, happy, etc.prepositions; examples, of, with, on, in, against, for, etc.
Adjectives usually go before nouns however this is not always true.He is good -- adjective = good but there is no noun after itHe is a good boy -- adjective is good and the noun is boy
no! mile marker is not a proper noun. a proper noun HAS TO BE capitalized.
In English, "a" is an indefinite article used before a noun to indicate that the following noun is one of a kind or unspecified. It is not a noun marker in the traditional sense but serves to specify the noun it precedes.
A noun marker is a word that marks a noun; it points to a noun that follows,often the very next word. Asking the question WHO or WHAT following a NM will reveal the noun being marked.
First, the pronouns need to agree-- I am holding a marker in "my" left hand. In this sentence, the word "my" and the word "left" become adjectives, because they are describing the noun "hand." If you wanted to describe the other noun (marker), you could say you were holding a "yellow" marker or a "large" marker. An adjective tells us more about the noun it is modifying.
The 'noun markers' are the articles; the definite article the and the indefinite articles a and an.The is used for a specific noun.A is used for a general noun starting with a consonant sound.An is use for a general noun starting with a vowel sound.Examples:The shampoo was advertised on TV. A man is shown washing his hair while an announcer tells us how much he is enjoying the experience.
The verb "follow" becomes a noun in the word "follower".
Yes, the compound noun 'home plate' is a common noun, a general word for the marker for the batter's position in baseball.
The word 'follow' is a verb (not a noun), a word for an action.The noun forms of the verb to follow are followerand the gerund, following; both are common nouns.Examples:A reception will follow the ceremony. (verb)He is an avid follower of soccer. (noun)Her following is a small group but very enthusiastic. (noun)
A noun marker is an article, a determiner, or a quantifier; one of those little words that precede and modify nouns.A determiner can be the definite article 'the' or the indefinite articles 'a' or 'an'.A determiner can be a possessive adjective: my, your, his, her, its, our, their, or whose.A determiner can be a demonstrative pronoun: this, that, these, or those.A quantifier tells us how many or how much:each, everyeither, neithersome, any, nomuch, many, more, mostlittle, less, leastfew, fewer, fewestwhat, whatever, which, whicheverall, both, halfseveralenough
An article indicates that a noun will follow; the definite article 'the', and the indefinite articles 'a' and 'an'.
Yes, "follow-through" is a noun. It refers to the act of continuing or completing a task, plan, or action until it is finished.
No, the word follow is a verb (follow, follows, following, followed), to come after in sequence, to go after someone or something. The noun forms for the verb to follow are follower and the gerund, following.