"The event interested the reporter so she wrote an article about it."
The pronouns are:
There are no pronouns in the sentence, 'A cactus blooms in the desert.' A = article cactus = noun blooms = verb in = preposition the = article desert = noun
The sentence, 'The play was very funny.' contains no pronouns. The = definite article play = noun, subject of the sentence was = verb very = adjective funny = adjective used as a noun, object of the sentence
No article is needed in that sentence.
There are no pronouns in the sentence, "Mike found fingerprints on the glass." Mike = proper noun, subject of the sentence found = verb of the sentence fingerprints = common noun, object of the verb on = preposition, introduces prepositional phrase the = definite article glass = common noun, object of the preposition
In sentence, i am looking at the window, the article is 'the'.Articles of speech in the English language are a, an, the.He bit into the apple.I had an awful trip.
There are no pronouns in the sentence, 'A cactus blooms in the desert.' A = article cactus = noun blooms = verb in = preposition the = article desert = noun
If you plagiarize the news article, you'll lose your job as a reporter.
In a final attempt to defame the family the reporter posted a nasty article.
The sentence, 'The play was very funny.' contains no pronouns. The = definite article play = noun, subject of the sentence was = verb very = adjective funny = adjective used as a noun, object of the sentence
The first sentence of any newspaper article is called the lede (or lead, for non-journalism people). It should include the Who, What, When, Where, Why and How of the article to follow (that's why it sounds like a summary--the lede is the hook with which a reporter is trying to attract a reader with, and readers want and need to know what the article is all about before they start plowing through and reading it). Ledes should typically be one sentence in length, although lede styles may vary from paper to paper and reporter to reporter.
The article in the sentence is: The
I just read an "Article". (that is the sentence)^^^
Finding a newspaper article that you are genuinely interested in for starters The assignment is to summarize this article with sociological terms?
No article is needed in that sentence.
I have an article to work on
There are no pronouns in the sentence, "Mike found fingerprints on the glass." Mike = proper noun, subject of the sentence found = verb of the sentence fingerprints = common noun, object of the verb on = preposition, introduces prepositional phrase the = definite article glass = common noun, object of the preposition
No, a news article should be based on facts. Facts can include the opinions of people interviewed for the article, but not the opinions of the reporter.