Yes. A vassal was a person ( a concrete noun): someone who owed allegiance to a lord or other figure in authority. The position or state was vassalage.
Yes, the noun 'vassal' is a concrete noun as a word for a person.
Subject of the sentence: the error (noun phrase)
Verb: taught
Direct Object: an expensive lesson (noun phrase)
Indirect Object: us
If I could tell you exactly where it is, it wouldn't be lost, but it is somewhere in the Superstition Mountains east of Phoenix.
The subject of the sentence is implied: you
Verb: find
Direct Object: easier way (noun phrase)
Infinitive verb: to diagram (functioning as an adjective modifying way)
Direct object of the infinitive: stories
Answer C.
heeler | is \
_______|_____\dog
|
lol, A+ Language.
Type the letter that represents the position on the diagram where the highlighted word in the sentence should appear.
Sarah loved the *sound* of the choir at the recital, and she decided to audition for the choir in the spring.
C = Sound
Sarah loved the sound of the choir at the recital, and she *decided* to audition for the choir in the spring.
M = Decided
Sarah loved the sound of the choir at the recital, and *she* decided to audition for the choir in the spring.
L = She
Sarah loved the sound of the choir at the recital, and she decided *to audition* for the choir in the spring.
N = To Audition
Sarah loved the sound *of* the choir at the recital, and she decided to audition for the choir in the spring.
E = Of
Sarah loved the sound of the choir at the recital, *and*she decided to audition for the choir in the spring.
K = And
Sarah loved the sound of the *choir* at the recital, and she decided to audition for the choir in the spring.
F = Choir
Sarah loved the sound of the choir at the *recital*, and she decided to audition for the choir in the spring.
I = Recital
A+ LS
the young girl who plays dom cobbs helper is Ellen page she stared in judo
No, humanitarian is a concrete noun as a word for a person, or an adjective used to describe a noun.
The abstract noun is humanitarianism.
The indirect object in this sentence, "Your father told us that you are moving in two weeks," is "us." The indirect object is the one that isn't doing the thing, but having the thing done to it.
If you remove all the extra information then the basic sentence (S V O) is:
Your father told us -- us is the DIRECT object
You is the INDIRECT object
A The campers were yelling and waving at the helicopter circling above.
B Standing on third base Gene could not believe his luck.
C The prospectors have been trying to find the Lost Dutchman's mine.
D Fried okra was served with the chicken.
B. The noun 'luck' is an abstract noun, a word for a concept.
parliament
You buy it.
under the verb. call it IO
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 abstract nouns are culture and wilderness, words for concepts.
The noun chaos is an abstract noun as a word for a state or condition.
The Sealed Envelope - 1912 was released on:
USA: 18 October 1912
The abstract nouns are melancholy (an emotion) and politics (a concept).
The nouns 'philosopher' and 'priest' are concrete nouns, words for people.
J
subject
Adjective
D
adverb
I love my dog. or I love my dog!
you need to capitalize the I and end with punctuation.