There is no limit on the number of nouns used in a sentence. (four nouns in that sentence) Examples:
No nouns: They flew away. (they is a pronoun, flew is a verb, away is an adverb)
One noun: The birds flew away.
Seven nouns: When John went to visit his grandma, she made him some soup, sandwiches, some lemonade and for his dessert, a baked apple.
The nouns in the sentence are geologist, scratches, direction, and movement.
The nouns in the sentence, people and hall, are both concrete nouns. There are no abstract nouns in the sentence. The use of the word 'protest' is the trick. As a noun, protest is an abstract noun, but in your sentence it is the verb form 'to protest', not a noun.
Capitalization
A pack of wolves inhabits the woods behind the lodge.
You can have an adjective and a verb in the same sentence but adjectives go with nouns, they describe nouns egadjective -- bignoun -- dogI saw a big dog. In this sentence the verb is saw.adjective -- interestingnoun -- storyI read an interesting story. In this sentence the verb is read.
what is a noun? We see and use many nouns everyday.
Verbs and nouns (or pronouns) are the basis of a sentence. Nouns (or pronouns), the subject of a sentence and a verb form a sentence or a clause.
Possibly but who has the time to write one? The word class nouns is a very large and open (new nouns can be added to the class) word class. So by the time someone writes the sentence there may be hundreds of new nouns.
The nouns in the sentence are geologist, scratches, direction, and movement.
The nouns in the sentence are geologist, scratches, direction, and movement.
There are no collective nouns in the sentence. A collective noun is determined by its use. A collective noun is a word used to group other nouns in a descriptive way. The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are often used as collective nouns, but in this sentence they are not. The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are not describing anyone.
The nouns in the sentence are: elephants, ears, and fans.
Use "there is" for one item. (singular nouns) Use "there is" for non-count items. (non-count nouns) Use "there are" for many items. (plural nouns)
The cat and the dog ARE playing.so you use are
it can be used as subject, object, or complement
much is always used with uncountable nouns or nouns that cannot take (s)
One can use the term "united" as an adjective in a sentence. The example is "United we stand, divided we fall". It can also be used in compound nouns as in "United Nations", "United States of America".