The nouns in the sentence are: teenagers and car.
The nouns in the sentence are teenagers and car.
The noun tells the reader who/what the sentence is referring to. For example: Sally rode the horse. ((It tells you WHO rode the horse.)) The chair is broken. ((It tells you WHAT is broken. )) Without the noun, you won't know who/what the sentence refers to: Rode the horse. Is broke.
Burro-noun A donkeyA sentence using burro-I rode my burro to the general store.
The common nouns in the sentence are:travelerspeedmileshour
The word traveler would be a common noun.
He rode away at a canter - Noun He cantered down into a village - Verb
No the word rode is not a noun. It is the past tense of the verb ride.
I - a personal pronounRode- a verbMy- possessive pronounOld yellow- adjectivesBike- noun
Rode is not a noun at all; rode is a verb, the past tense of ride. The noun form is ride, a common noun. Example sentences:We all rode from the airport in the same limo. The ride from the airport was longer than the flight.If you mean the noun for a street or highway, it is spelled road, which is a common noun.
subject: we verb: had noun: sweet potato pie sentence: We had sweet potato pie with dinner. subject: Jack verb: rode noun: bike sentence: Jack rode his bike to school. subject: river verb: ran noun: farm sentence: The river ran through our farm.
I rode a horse.
no it not