2 - cat and mat
The nouns are cat & mouse.
Two: cat and mat.
"Played" is the verb. Verbs are action words. "The dog" is the subject because it is doing the action, it is playing with the cat. "The cat" is the object, the thing being played with.
Sleeps is the verb Cat is the subject
The subject is "my cat" and there is no action verb. The linking verb is "is" (to be).
The nouns are cat & mouse.
Two: cat and mat.
Therer are two nouns. Both cat and tree are nouns.
There are two nouns. The nouns are cat and claws. Sarah's is a proper noun in the possessive case, which acts as an adjective.
The cat and the dog ARE playing.so you use are
Nouns: "The cat" Pronouns: "He"
The nouns in the sentence are:foxcity (for some, reason four out of five dictionaries say that country is an adjective and a noun but city is just a noun, used here as a 'noun as adjective')catday
Sure! Here’s a sentence containing 20 nouns: "The dog chased the cat across the park, while children played with toys, a ball rolled near the bench, and a butterfly landed on a flower." In this sentence, the nouns include dog, cat, park, children, toys, ball, bench, butterfly, and flower.
"Played" is the verb. Verbs are action words. "The dog" is the subject because it is doing the action, it is playing with the cat. "The cat" is the object, the thing being played with.
Sleeps is the verb Cat is the subject
The subject of a sentence is the noun or nouns that perform or receive the action of the sentence. An example of a sentence with two subjects would be, "Molly and her cat, Mr. Paws, napped together on the couch."
The pronoun that takes the place of the nouns 'cat' or 'dog' in a sentence is it.Examples:I saw this dog at the shelter and I knew it was meant for me.The cat was black but it had white feet.