No, it is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "to take."
The noun clause is, 'What took place in the courtroom'. The noun clause is acting as the subject of the sentence.
No. Took is the past tense of the verb to take. An adjective describes a noun. You cannot say the took house. Took doesn't describe.
The noun clause is "that Stella took dance lessons at her age".The noun clause is the direct object of the verb believe.
The noun 'collection' is a common noun that can be used as a collective noun.Example:common noun: We took up a collection for the hurricane victims fund.collective noun: A collection of leaves had blocked the gutter.
Yes, the noun load is a countable noun. The plural form is loads. example: It took three loads of soil to level the field.
The noun clause is, 'What took place in the courtroom'. The noun clause is acting as the subject of the sentence.
The noun in the sentence is 'paper'.
No. Took is the past tense of the verb "to take."
No. Took is the past tense of the verb to take. An adjective describes a noun. You cannot say the took house. Took doesn't describe.
The noun clause is "that Stella took dance lessons at her age".The noun clause is the direct object of the verb believe.
The word cab is a noun, it's a thing. He took a cab down town. (Noun) A cab picked him up and took him downtown. (Noun) Cabs have big seats (Noun) She cabbed her way around town. (verb, informal)
The noun 'collection' is a common noun that can be used as a collective noun.Example:common noun: We took up a collection for the hurricane victims fund.collective noun: A collection of leaves had blocked the gutter.
Yes, the noun load is a countable noun. The plural form is loads. example: It took three loads of soil to level the field.
It depends on how you are using the word "dad". If you are saying something like, "On Saturday, my dad took me to the zoo" then you are using "dad"" as a common noun You are talking about your relationship to the person who took you to the zoo, not using the person's name. If you are saying, "On Saturday, Dad took me to the zoo" then you are using "dad" as a proper noun. You are using the name of the person who took you to the zoo, in this instance, not talking about your relationship to that person.
The noun clause is that Stella took dance lessons at her age. The noun clause is introduced by a relative pronoun that and acts as the object of the verb believe.A noun clause is dependent clause which can be used as a noun as the subject of a sentence or the object of a verb or a preposition. The noun clauses are generally introduced by relative pronouns such as that, which, who, when, whichever, whoever, whenever, whether and so on.
No
The word brother is a noun.