There is no collective noun in the given sentence.
A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or a fanciful way.
Examples of collective nouns are:
The nouns in the sentence are:
None
He climbed the ladder to the house's peak.
the summit is high
The adverb form of sleepiness is sleepily.An example sentence is: "she sleepily climbed into bed".
The transitive verb is called.
You could use "ladder" in a sentence like this... I climbed up the ladder to get in my attic. My dad owns a ladder. We keep our ladder in our backyard. I climbed up the ladder. Do you own a ladder?
none
No, the words 'carefully' and 'climbed' are not nouns.The word 'carefully' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.The word 'climbed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to climb.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The term 'carefully climbed' can be used as an 'adverb-verb' combination, for example:He carefully climbed the dangerous rockface.The term 'carefully climbed' can be used as an 'adverb-adjective' combination, for example: The carefully climbed rockface was a very dangerous one.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way, for example a world of cares, a series of climbs, a team of climbers, etc.
The simple preicate is "climbed" and the complete predicate is "climbed on the monkey bar then" (then is an adverb for climbed).
the man climbed on the moon by the rocket carefully.
I climbed and climbed until i reached the steep brink
There was this precarious ladder that had to be climbed. This is a sentence for the word precarious.
There is not one in the given sentence.
They climbed to the top of the canyon.
I had to climb up the tree to get the frightened kitten. The cougar climbed the tree to lay down its prey on the branches. She steadly climbed up the steep hill.
declarative
The muezzin climbed the minaret to intone the call to prayer.
He climbed the ladder to the house's peak.