No. The clown juggled with three balls is not an exclamatory sentence. Therefore, it would have a period at the end.
The clown performed a hilarious act at the circus, making all the children laugh.
Nouns are a person, place or thing. Children, party, and clown are nouns.In this sentence, the bold words represent the nouns.The children at the party were afraid of the big clown.Big is not in bold because it is a adjective, which is a word that describes a noun.
"laughing at the silly clown"
Like is the preposition.
In the example sentence, "The clown chased a dog around the ring.", the word 'ring' is a noun, a word for a thing that functions as a stage for a performance in a circus.
The word 'deftly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'deft'.The adverb 'deftly' modifies a verb as with skill, quickly and accurately.Example sentence: "The clown deftly juggled a chainsaw, pineapple, and teddy bear in his street act."
she has 10000000 balls
Verb: "Don't clown over it! You look silly!"Noun: There is a clown over there.
she has 10000000 balls
The nouns in the sentence are clown (possessive form), mask, and sadness.
The clown performed a hilarious act at the circus, making all the children laugh.
Two have 3 balls, two have 5 balls.
No, the term 'Tommy the clown' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a noun in a sentence. The noun phrase 'Tommy the clown' is base on the noun 'Tommy' restated by the noun 'clown'.The noun phrase 'Tommy the clown' is singular, one person, Tommy.Example:Tommy the clown is appearing tonight. (subject of the sentence)We have tickets to see Tommy the clown. (direct object of the verb 'see')She's appearing with Tommy the clown. (object of the preposition 'with')
The clown's trousers were quite voluminous. :]
the clown rode the unicycle down the street
Nouns are a person, place or thing. Children, party, and clown are nouns.In this sentence, the bold words represent the nouns.The children at the party were afraid of the big clown.Big is not in bold because it is a adjective, which is a word that describes a noun.
"laughing at the silly clown"