Good sentences for the word 'aunt' will more or less always be talking about a family member.
'My aunt Margaret has crazy red hair, and lives with 20 cats'
'Her aunt is quite the character, very much unlike her mother, who I find rather dull.'
'Your aunt will be here soon, you better clean your room.'
The subject is aunt because the rest of the sentence is about her.
I love to listen to my aunt's old records. We went to my aunt's house. Aunt is just your mother's/father's sister. The apostrophe with an "s" is possessive--meaning that something belongs to her.
My aunt was malnourished because she had a cold.
The positions of nouns are as the subject of a sentence or a clause and the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:Noun subject: Aunt Jane made cookies for Jack and Jill.Subject of clause: The cookies that Aunt Jane made are for Jack and Jill.Noun object of verb: Aunt Jane made cookies for Jack and Jill.Noun object of preposition: Aunt Jane made cookies for Jack and Jill.
I am going to Hajj. I will go to Hajj next year. My aunt is back from Hajj. Performing Hajj is a good deed.
I refused to stay at my aunt's house that night.
The subject is aunt because the rest of the sentence is about her.
aunt
My aunt Holly is as tiny as an ant!
Yes because Aunt is a common noun and it deserves to be Capitalized
I love my aunt and uncle. The boy's aunt was his mother's older sister, and she was very strict.
Yes, the sentence "you saw your uncle and aunt come out" is grammatically correct. It describes the action of seeing both your uncle and aunt exiting from a place.
Capitalize "Aunt" when it is used as a proper noun directly before the person's name, such as "Aunt Jane," "Aunt Mary," or "Aunt Sarah." However, if the word "aunt" is used informally or generically, it is not capitalized, such as "my aunt" or "she is an aunt."
"Aunt is teaching uncle how to cook."
My aunt suffers from blindess.
His aunt is also his godmother.
My aunt is monogamy.