Electric=Adjective, Train=Noun, Set=Noun.
In the term 'electric train set', the nouns are 'train' and set', forming the compound noun 'train set'. The word electric is an adjective describing the train set.
Yes. 'Train whistle' is a compound noun, which means that both 'train' and 'whistle' are nouns individually but here they work together. The word 'train' is applied to 'whistle' in the place of an adjective, that is, a word that describes the type of whistle. But have you ever heard a wolf whistle? Many compound nouns eventually run together, like handbook or cupboard, and maybe one day, wolfwhistle.
The noun phrase 'old stone age' is an abstractnoun phrase, a word for a period of time in history. All nouns for time and periods of time are abstract nouns. Time is a concept, not a physical thing.
The word 'we' is a pronoun; we replaces first person, plural subject nouns in a sentence or phrase.
Yes, the word nouns is a common noun, a general word for a type of word; the plural form of the word noun, a thing.
In the term 'electric train set', the nouns are 'train' and set', forming the compound noun 'train set'. The word electric is an adjective describing the train set.
In the phrase 'area of a shape', both area and shape are nouns. In your mind, add 'the', it helps to show that they are nouns: 'the area of the shape'.
Yes. 'Train whistle' is a compound noun, which means that both 'train' and 'whistle' are nouns individually but here they work together. The word 'train' is applied to 'whistle' in the place of an adjective, that is, a word that describes the type of whistle. But have you ever heard a wolf whistle? Many compound nouns eventually run together, like handbook or cupboard, and maybe one day, wolfwhistle.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.An antecedent is the word that a pronoun is replacing.Example: When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. ("George" is the antecedent of the pronoun "he.")
"Ride on the train" is not a word-- it is a phrase. You use it like this: A hundred years ago, when black people wanted to ride on the train, they had to sit in a special "negro" car because the railroads were segregated.
The noun phrase 'old stone age' is an abstractnoun phrase, a word for a period of time in history. All nouns for time and periods of time are abstract nouns. Time is a concept, not a physical thing.
The noun 'phrase' is a concrete noun as a word for a group of words, spoken or written.The noun 'phrase' is an abstract noun as a word for a part of speech; a word for a concept.The word 'phrase' is also a verb: phrase, phrases, phrasing, phrased.
Each word in the phrase belongs to some part of speech. "Daedalus" and "Icarus" are proper nouns. "Son" is a common noun. "And" is a conjunction. "Is" is a verb.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing. EXAMPLES nouns for persons: parent, mom, tailor, neighbor, friend, officer, cousin nouns for places: national park, continent, city, country, island, beach nouns for things: pony, pancake, tree, education, restaurant, train, jacket
The word "with" is a preposition that is used to show relationships between words in a sentence, often indicating associations or connections between nouns.
No it's a phrase. Nouns are a person, place, thing, or idea. A phrase has more than one word each of which is its own part of speech. Your phrase is "Two children look in" Two is an adjective. Children is a noun. Look is a verb. In is a preposition.
The word 'we' is a pronoun; we replaces first person, plural subject nouns in a sentence or phrase.