The nouns in the sentence are: Bob, book, and pencil.
Bob and street are the nouns in this sentence. Bob is a proper noun, a name.
Bob
The nouns in the sentences are: Bob (possessive form) hair blue
Common nouns are house, paper, dog. Proper nouns are Bob, New York, and Chevy.
There isn't an appositive phrase in that sentence.
No. The word "he" is a pronoun. The antecedent would be the word that "he" referred to, as in the sentence "Bob dropped the book as he ran for the bus" where "he" refers to Bob.
No,a pronoun takes the place of a noun. For example,"He"can take the placeof "Bob" in this sentence,"Bob likes to run"If you don't get it now,there is no way I can help you,sorry.If you do get it,great,good for you!:D
It's hard to figure out what "it" is in your question. Are you referring to the subject of a sentence that has two nouns connected by the word and, as in Bob and Ray are playing baseball? In that case, the subject, Bob and Ray, is plural and takes a plural verb. But when the two nouns connected by and act as a unit, they take a singular verb, as in Ham and eggs is my favorite breakfast and Pork and beans tastes great.
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.The appositive in the sentence is Bob Huylett, which renames the noun 'author'.
A noun in English, and in any language, is a:personplacethingidea.This is a very condensed definition of a noun, but it gives a basic overview. So, for instance, 'Nebraska' and 'pencil' are both nouns. However, the group of nouns is further split into two groups - proper nouns and improper nouns. Proper nouns are people or places, and they all start with a capital letter (i.e. 'Bob', 'Susan', 'Melbourne'). Improper nouns are usually inanimate objects, such as 'eraser' and 'keyboard'. Anything noun that isn't proper is improper.Sometime the noun groups are called proper and common (improper) nouns.Also nouns are divided into:concrete and abstract nouns: house / dreamcountable and uncountable nouns: apple / ricesingular and plural nouns: boy / boysand collective (group) nouns: flock of sheep / team of players
Yes, the phrase "Bob's house" includes two nouns. The possessive form of the proper noun Bob and the noun house. The two nouns together form a noun phrase.
Proper nouns are the unique names of people, places, or things. Examples include Bob, Obama, New York.