The nouns in the sentence are people, shoes, and juice.
Nouns are people, place, and thing words. The nouns in your sentence are "brains" and "watermelons."
The nouns in the sentence are: park and people.
Both common nouns and proper nouns name people, places, and things. Example common nouns: mother, island, juice Example proper nouns: Mother Teresa, Jamaica, Mott's Apple Juice
No, juice is relating to one item. Nouns like "people" and "Family" are collective.
There are three nouns: people, world, and cities. People and cities are plural nouns.
Compound nouns are either separate words (apple juice), or hyphenated words (brother-in-law), or one word (headmaster).
There are three nouns. They are people, thousands, and years (all plural nouns).
The concrete nouns in the sentence are: people and things.The abstract nouns in the sentence are: imagination and time.
There are multiple nouns in that sentence. If you're looking for the subject, it is "you." But, "people," "coupons," and "newspaper," are also nouns.
The nouns in the sentence, people and hall, are both concrete nouns. There are no abstract nouns in the sentence. The use of the word 'protest' is the trick. As a noun, protest is an abstract noun, but in your sentence it is the verb form 'to protest', not a noun.
The nouns in the sentence are "people," "enjoyment," and "odors." "People" refers to individuals, "enjoyment" indicates a state of pleasure, and "odors" represents specific scents. These nouns are the key subjects and objects that convey the main ideas of the sentence.
The nouns in the sentence are:peoplesmellfoodsgrassrain