There are two nouns. The words reporter and news are nouns.
No, the phrase 'good news' is a noun phrasemade up of the adjective 'good' describing the common noun 'news'.
In the sentence, "That news calls for a celebration." the nouns are news and celebration.
Ys, we can use spread or distribute with news in a sentence. Hope it helps! And hey if you want to submit any news regarding your website, or its launch you can visit - www(dot)pressreleasepower(dot)com
The common nouns in the sentence are: magician, announcement, and news.
No, the sentence "what a great news it is" is not correct. The word "news" is an uncountable noun, so it should be "what great news it is." The correct phrasing emphasizes the positive nature of the news without the article "a."
The mass (uncountable) noun 'news' is normally used as a singular noun when determining the verb, even though it is a plural form; for example:What is the latest news?The news is good.The news has spread like wildfire.The news was on at six.
Surprise can be a noun or verb, and as a noun, it can act as an adjective. Examples: Noun: Darren's resignation was a surprise to almost everyone. Verb: I wanted to surprise you with the good news. Noun acting as an adjective: My brother paid me a surprise visit.
The proper noun in the sentence "Naveen is a good boy" is the word "Naveen."
"The event interested the reporter so she wrote an article about it."The pronouns are:she, the third person, singular, subjective pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a female; the antecedent for the pronoun is the noun 'reporter'.it, the third person, singular, neuter pronoun used in this sentence as the object of the preposition 'about'; the antecedent for the pronoun is the noun 'event'.
Any noun can function as an indirect object. A noun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Example sentence for the noun 'president' as indirect object: The minister brought the president some bad news. (the direct object is 'news', the indirect object is 'president')
No, the noun "news" is functioning as an attributive noun in the noun phrase "news article".In the phrase "news article", the noun "news" is describing the noun "article", not showing ownership or possession. An attributive noun (also called a noun adjunct) is a noun functioning as an adjective, describing another noun.
News is a noun.