A noun in the nominative case is a noun that is:
A predicate nominative is a noun or a pronoun. A predicate noun is a noun.
Two personal pronouns are used for the nominative and objective cases; they are you and it.
The predicate nominative is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject. The objective personal pronoun 'her' can function as a predicate nominative. Example:The winner is her.The possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun. The possessive adjective 'her' can describe a noun that is a predicate nominative. Example:The winner is her horse.
Noun: it is a noun, an object or a person, not an adjective or a verb. Words such as "Peter", "bread", "flower" and "car" are all nouns. Singular: it is not plural, just one. As for "nominative"... Nominative means the word is serving as a SUBJECT in the sentence, the one doing the action. It is a terminology that applies only to languages that have "grammatical cases", such as Latin, classical Arabic and some Eastern European languages: this means a word slightly changes (usually in the ending) according to the purpose they serve in a sentence. In latin if you want to say Peter is a good guy, you should say Petrus est homo bonus. Where "Petrus", the subject of the sentence, is a nominative singular noun :-) hope that helped
An appositive is a noun immediately following another noun that restates it.A noun in the nominative case is functioning as the subject of a sentence or a clause, or as a predicate nominative.Examples:That book, a novel, is on the best sellers' list.The noun 'novel' is the appositive which restates the subject noun 'book'.That is a popular book, a novel.The noun 'novel' is the appositive which restates the predicate nominative 'book'.
It is neither. It is a personal pronoun, the second person pronoun in both the nominative and objective cases.
A nominative noun is a noun that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, or as a predicate nominative (a subject complement).The nominative nouns in the sentence are cotton (the subject of the sentence) and plant (a predicate nominative, a noun that follows a linking verb and restates the subject: cotton = plant)
The predicate nominative is the noun dinner.The complete predicate nominative is the noun phrase 'a buffet dinner'.The noun (noun phrase) restates the subject demonstrative pronoun 'this' following the linking verb 'is'.
A predicate nominative is a noun or pronoun that follows a linking verb. Crate is a noun, so it can be used as a predicate nominative. Example: That is a crate.
A predicate nominative is a noun or a pronoun. A predicate noun is a noun.
Two personal pronouns are used for the nominative and objective cases; they are you and it.
A predicate noun (predicate nominative) is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject. A predicate nominative is a function in a sentence, not a specific noun; any noun can be a predicate nominative. The word 'writer' is a noun.
No. Either genitive singular or nominative plural.
The predicate nominative is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject. The objective personal pronoun 'her' can function as a predicate nominative. Example:The winner is her.The possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun. The possessive adjective 'her' can describe a noun that is a predicate nominative. Example:The winner is her horse.
Noun: it is a noun, an object or a person, not an adjective or a verb. Words such as "Peter", "bread", "flower" and "car" are all nouns. Singular: it is not plural, just one. As for "nominative"... Nominative means the word is serving as a SUBJECT in the sentence, the one doing the action. It is a terminology that applies only to languages that have "grammatical cases", such as Latin, classical Arabic and some Eastern European languages: this means a word slightly changes (usually in the ending) according to the purpose they serve in a sentence. In latin if you want to say Peter is a good guy, you should say Petrus est homo bonus. Where "Petrus", the subject of the sentence, is a nominative singular noun :-) hope that helped
A nominative noun is a noun functioning as the subject of a sentence or a clause, or as a predicate nominative (a noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject). Examples:subject of the sentence: Janet is joining us for lunch.subject of the clause: The cookies that mother made are for the bake sale.predicate nominative: Jack is our drummer. (Jack = drummer)
An appositive is a noun immediately following another noun that restates it.A noun in the nominative case is functioning as the subject of a sentence or a clause, or as a predicate nominative.Examples:That book, a novel, is on the best sellers' list.The noun 'novel' is the appositive which restates the subject noun 'book'.That is a popular book, a novel.The noun 'novel' is the appositive which restates the predicate nominative 'book'.