appositive.
A noun that follows another noun to explain what it is called an appositive. An example would be Peter the Apostle, in which the word "Apostle" is acting as an appositive.
An object of the preposition is the noun or pronoun that follows a preposition and completes the prepositional phrase. To identify it, look for the preposition in the sentence and then see what noun or pronoun comes directly after it.
An appositive phrase is a phrase in which the noun is more identified. It is always found in between commas and used to give more information to the noun so that the reader can specifically identify the noun.Example:Our pediatrician, the one who has several awards and is famous for his work, became ill last month. (the appositive phrase is italisized)-Pepper Monstevalii
The noun, pronoun, or noun form that follows a preposition is its object. The object of the preposition is being connected to another word, by forming an adjective or adverbial prepositional phrase.
A predicate nominative is a noun or a pronoun that follows a linking verb and describes the subject. It is another way of naming the subject. Example:He remains a doctor. remains = linking verb, a doctor = predicate noun (he = doctor)
an appositive
A noun that follows another noun to explain what it is called an appositive. An example would be Peter the Apostle, in which the word "Apostle" is acting as an appositive.
An appositive is a noun or a pronoun that follows another noun or pronoun in a sentence to identify or explain.Example: Don't leave your burger there, my dog, Artemis will steal it.The noun Artemis is the appositive for the noun dog.
The sentence which uses FOLLOWS in a sentence can we written as this. The horse follows the train in the movie.
An object of the preposition is the noun or pronoun that follows a preposition and completes the prepositional phrase. To identify it, look for the preposition in the sentence and then see what noun or pronoun comes directly after it.
An appositive phrase is a phrase in which the noun is more identified. It is always found in between commas and used to give more information to the noun so that the reader can specifically identify the noun.Example:Our pediatrician, the one who has several awards and is famous for his work, became ill last month. (the appositive phrase is italisized)-Pepper Monstevalii
The noun, pronoun, or noun form that follows a preposition is its object. The object of the preposition is being connected to another word, by forming an adjective or adverbial prepositional phrase.
A predicate nominative is a noun or a pronoun that follows a linking verb and describes the subject. It is another way of naming the subject. Example:He remains a doctor. remains = linking verb, a doctor = predicate noun (he = doctor)
"I was sent the present" is correct, passive but correct. The first sentence needs "to" before "me" to be correct--"The present was sent to me."To make the sentence active, identify who sent the present. For example, "Billy Bob sent the present to me."
A phrase that renames or describes another noun or noun phrase is known as an appositive phrase. Appositive examples:Noun appositive: Mr. Johnson, my neighbor, often gives me flowers.Pronoun appositive: The winners, you and I, have to pose for photos.
Well you just did it... Another example though would be as follows: The class that I am an is über boring, but it should be an easy A so I will just endure it.
A subject pronoun follows a linking verb.For example:Correct:"The best baseball player is he."Incorrect:"The best baseball player is him."