Kiss on face
The one noun in the sentence is bus.
Furtive is not a noun.The man across the aisle in the bus shot me a furtiveglance.In this sentence furtive is an adjective.
"When will the bus arrive?" The noun in the sentence is bus, a word for a thing.
It is a sentence. It has a subject - bus a predicate - got to the village. It also conveys a complete thought
it is a statement
i want to answer of bans ki lakdi
It means climbed aboard or rode the nearest bus.
yes ,you can get Volvo nus opposite shilparaman park near cyber tower :vaibhav even after night 10.30pm buses are available will it go via lakdi ka pul you did'nt answer my question whether volvo buses are available after 10.30 pm and whether it will go via lakdi ka pul
I am not a grammar expert so this is a personal opinion. I think it is a sentence. Consider "Here's Tom" or "Here's the bus". They are sentences. Tom is here; the bus is here. Here's why means 'why is here', or 'this [here] is the reason [why]. It is not a particularly good sentence mind you, but it is a sentence.
The one noun in the sentence is bus.
Both are correct, with different meaning. On the bus means "taking a bus trip." In the bus means "actually inside the bus."
Furtive is not a noun.The man across the aisle in the bus shot me a furtiveglance.In this sentence furtive is an adjective.
"When will the bus arrive?" The noun in the sentence is bus, a word for a thing.
The noun 'bus' is used as the subject of a sentence or clause, and the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:subject of the sentence: The school bus is yellow.subject of the clause: A bus that ran a red lighthit a pole.object of the verb: Did I miss the bus?object of the preposition: I hate to be late for the bus.
The nouns are town and bus. I is a pronoun.
No, standing on bus stop is not correct. Standing at the bus stop is correct.
The pronoun 'she' takes the place of a singular noun (or name) for a female as the subject of a sentence or a clause.Examples:Mother will be here at ten. She will be taking the bus. (subject of the second sentence)The bus that she is taking is an express. (subject of the relative clause)