In the sentence "The little girl chased a chipmunk" the nouns are "girl" and "chipmunk."
The nouns in that sentence are "Samantha" and "dog".
The nouns in your sentence are group, nouns, and sentence.
The abstract nouns in the sentence are education and defense.
The nouns in the sentence are excitement and air.
The nouns in the sentence are summer and lake.
boy -- The boy chased the dog dog -- The dog chased the boy. table -- The boy chased the dog around the table. cat -- The cat chased the mouse. flower -- Flowers are nice.
The nouns in the sentence are girl and dress.
The nouns in the sentence are:itemrubberstrength
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'stag' is a word for a male deer. The nouns for a female deer are cow, hind, or doe.Example sentence: The hunter chased the doe.
The nouns in that sentence are "Samantha" and "dog".
"There was a little girl named Anna, she sat on her friendJessica."The nouns in the sentence are: girl, Anna, friend, Jessica.The word 'there' can be a noun but in this sentence, the word 'there' is functioning as a pronoun, used to introduce the clause 'There was a little girl', the subject of the first part of the compound sentence.
The nouns in your sentence are group, nouns, and sentence.
The two nouns, 'nouns' and 'sentence' are placed correctly in your sentence.
In the question above, nouns and sentence are the only nouns. Neither of which are proper nouns.
The nouns in the sentence are frogs, place, and place.
Yes it is.An adjective describes a noun.The black dog chased the small chicken.In this sentence black and small are adjectives they describe the nouns dog and cat.The choir sang a spiritual song. In this sentence spiritual is an adejective
The abstract nouns in the sentence are education and defense.