The noun is apple, a word for a thing.
In the sentence, "You ate an apple." the noun is apple, a word for a thing.
"The" is an article in both occurrences; "apple" is a noun, "is" is a verb, "on" is a preposition, and "ground" is a noun.
There is no pronoun in the saying "An apple a day keeps the doctor away."A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence, for example:"It keeps the doctor away." (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun phrase 'an apple a day', which is the subject of the sentence)"An apple a day keeps him away." (the pronoun 'him' takes the place of the noun 'doctor')
The word 'sour' is a verb (sour, sours, souring, soured), an adjective (sour, more sour, most sour), and a noun (sour, sours). Example uses: Verb: Your milk will sour more readily if you keep it in the door of the refrigerator. Adjective: The sour cherries make excellent muffins. Noun: I'll have a whiskey sour please.
The nouns in the sentence are: target, common noun William Tell, proper noun apple, common noun son's, common, possessive noun head, common noun All of the above nouns are singular, concrete nouns.
In the sentence, "You ate an apple." the noun is apple, a word for a thing.
"The" is an article in both occurrences; "apple" is a noun, "is" is a verb, "on" is a preposition, and "ground" is a noun.
You could consider only tree a noun. Or apple as well, since it is used as a noun adjunct, not technically an adjective. You could also consider "apple tree" to be a compound noun.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is not a proper noun.
No, the noun 'apple' is a common noun, a general word for a type of fruit. It is capitalized in the example sentence because it is the first word in the sentence.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'apple' is the name of someone or something specific, for example, the Golden Apple Inn in Glen, NH or Apple, Inc. in Cupertino, CA.
The noun form is sourness. However, regarding a sour taste, it is a concrete noun because it can be detected by your senses.
There is no pronoun in the saying "An apple a day keeps the doctor away."A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence, for example:"It keeps the doctor away." (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun phrase 'an apple a day', which is the subject of the sentence)"An apple a day keeps him away." (the pronoun 'him' takes the place of the noun 'doctor')
There are no volts in a sour apple. Volts are a unit of measurement for electrical potential difference, not something present in a fruit like a sour apple.
The word "apple" should not be capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a proper noun (e.g., "Apple Inc.").
The word 'sour' is a verb (sour, sours, souring, soured), an adjective (sour, more sour, most sour), and a noun (sour, sours). Example uses: Verb: Your milk will sour more readily if you keep it in the door of the refrigerator. Adjective: The sour cherries make excellent muffins. Noun: I'll have a whiskey sour please.
The nouns in the sentence are: target, common noun William Tell, proper noun apple, common noun son's, common, possessive noun head, common noun All of the above nouns are singular, concrete nouns.
The common noun in the sentence "It is fun to go to the apple farm" is "farm." Common nouns refer to general items or concepts, as opposed to proper nouns, which specify unique entities. In this case, "apple" is a modifier describing the type of farm, but "farm" itself is the common noun.