There are four nouns. Mr. Perez is a proper noun. Care, eyesight, and family are common nouns.
No, the word family is a noun, a singular, common noun. The pronoun that takes the place of family in a sentence is they (subject), them (object), or it (sujbect or object).
The possessive word in the sentence is my.The word 'my' is a type of pronoun called a possessive adjective.The pronoun 'my' takes the place of the noun (name) for the person speaking.My family = the family of the person speaking.
"When your family and you visited Venice, you went to the Island of Murano."The pronouns are:your = possessive adjective, describes the noun 'family'you = personal pronoun, takes the place of your name, subject of the verb 'visited'you = personal pronoun, takes the place of your name, subject of the verb 'went'
He takes a kee interset
The pronoun in the sentence is he, which takes the place of a singular noun for a male.
No, a name (first or last) is a noun, a word for a person. The name of a person is a proper noun.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example:My new neighbor is Mr. Perez. I believe that hecomes from California. (the pronoun 'he' takes the places of the proper noun 'Mr. Perez' in the second sentence)
No, the word family is a noun, a singular, common noun. The pronoun that takes the place of family in a sentence is they (subject), them (object), or it (sujbect or object).
There are NO pronouns in the sentence.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; for example:They visited New York during summer vacation.The pronoun 'they' takes the place of the compound subject of the sentence 'Betty and the family'.Betty and the family visited it during summer vacation.The pronoun 'it' takes the place of the direct object noun 'New York'.
The possessive word in the sentence is my.The word 'my' is a type of pronoun called a possessive adjective.The pronoun 'my' takes the place of the noun (name) for the person speaking.My family = the family of the person speaking.
"It Takes a Family" by Rick Santorum has 384 pages.
A pronoun can take the place of the subject in a sentence. Pronouns like "he," "she," "it," "they," and "we" can replace the subject to avoid repeating the same noun.
It Takes a Family was created on 2005-07-04.
False
The ISBN of It Takes a Family is 1-932236-29-5.
"When your family and you visited Venice, you went to the Island of Murano."The pronouns are:your = possessive adjective, describes the noun 'family'you = personal pronoun, takes the place of your name, subject of the verb 'visited'you = personal pronoun, takes the place of your name, subject of the verb 'went'
Takes is the third person singular form of the verb take.Use takes when the subject of the sentence is He/She/It or a singular noun.He takes what he can get.The doctor takes a long time. -- singular noun subject
a sentence that takes the place of a human act