The nouns are cat & mouse.
2 - cat and mat
Two: cat and mat.
It can have a two part verb but it doesn't have to.In an active sentence we can see who or what does the action of the verb:The cat chased the mouse. -- cat is the subject, chased is the verb and mouse is the object. The cat does the action, chase.In this next sentence we don't know who or what does the action:The mouse was chased. -- was chased is the verb.This sentence is a passive sentence.Here is an active sentence with a two part verb:I picked up my son from school.here is the same sentence in passive tense:My son was picked late yesterday.
"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.
A cat is also called a feline. The feline was hunting a mouse.
The sentence "The cat chased the mouse" is in the active voice because the subject (the cat) is performing the action (chased) on the object (the mouse).
Prey, dinner, lunch, or possibly the snack.
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.
2 - cat and mat
Two: cat and mat.
It is not out of the ordinary for a cat to chase a mouse.
they eat rats,mice,and anything in the mouse selected:)
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 cat and the dog ARE playing.so you use are
Nouns: "The cat" Pronouns: "He"
Nouns in the nominative case can act as subjects of sentences, naming the doer of the action. For example, in the sentence "The cat chased the mouse," "cat" is the nominative noun as the subject of the sentence. Nouns can also serve as predicate nominatives, renaming the subject after a linking verb, as in "She is a doctor."