"My aunt works at Woods Hole as a scientist."
The nouns are:
The two nouns are day and night. He is a pronoun.
Yes, the word works. The word is an action performed by the subject Mary. Mary works every day
The government does public works
True.
Sometimes. BUT it depends on the sentence you had in mind. Very rarely the sentence works with but as the starting word.
"Your aunt works at Woods Holeas a scientist."The nouns are:aunt, subject of the sentenceWoods Hole, object of the preposition 'at'scientiest, object of the preposition 'as'
The two nouns are day and night. He is a pronoun.
A scientist who works at night is often referred to as a nocturnal scientist or a night researcher.
local and foriegn scientist
work is one works is a plural
A logger, forest ranger, hunter, or animal activist might work in the woods.
They usually don't work very well in the woods. But it works just like any other radio works. Nothing very different just because it is in the woods.
yes it works really as i am a scientist
A carpenter works with wood.
Nouns are not the same as pronouns. A pronoun can replace a noun when the meaning is clear. You could write, "Bill checked out the book and then Bill went home." You could use a pronoun. "Bill checked out the book and then he went home." You could not write. "He checked out the book and then he went home." The Third sentence in quotes starts with a pronoun. No one knows who this "He" might be. It is confusing. The first sentence works. It is awkward. The second sentence is the best. The pronoun replaces the second Bill. Pronouns and nouns do the same job but they are not the same.
nonsense
An engineer.