The nouns in the sentence are "Wendy" and "housekeeper."
The nouns in a sentence are usually the subject of the subject and the object of the sentence or phrase. However a sentence may have no nouns at all. Example: You didn't give me any. In this example, the subject the object and the indirect object are all pronouns.In your question: Where might you likely find nouns in a sentence? The nouns in this sentence are the direct and indirect objects of the sentence.In the answer to the question: Nouns are usually the subject and object of the sentence or phrase. The nouns in this sentence are the subject, the direct object, and the indirect object of the sentence.
The common nouns in the sentence are:houseschool
"Elephant" and "zoo" are the nouns in the sentence.
There are three nouns. House, distance, and homes are all nouns.
There are two nouns in this sentence noun is a noun and sentence is a noun.
The nouns in the sentence are Wendy and housekeeper.
There are TWO(2) nouns. First is the proper noun 'Kaitlin'. The second is the common noun 'housekeeper'. For all COMMON nouns, the (in)definite article '(a/an)/the' immediately preceeds the common noun. Proper nouns do NOT use the 'articles'. NB For proper nouns we do NOT say 'The Caitlin' or 'The New York'. For common nouns us in the difinite article are always preceded by 'the'. For common nounds using the indefinite article, the vowels a,e,i,o,u and the consonent 'h', are preceded by 'an'. e.g. 'an housekeeper' or , 'an opening'. NEITHER 'a housekeeper', nor 'a opening'. For all common nouns beginning with a consonant are preceded by 'a'.
In the sentence The United States of America is located in North America the nouns are United States, America, and North America.
The proper nouns: Aegean Sea, Greece, Turkey. There aren't any common nouns.
The nouns in your sentence are group, nouns, and sentence.
The two nouns, 'nouns' and 'sentence' are placed correctly in your sentence.
In the question above, nouns and sentence are the only nouns. Neither of which are proper nouns.
The nouns in the sentence are frogs, place, and place.
Sense, smell, and nose are nouns. Your is a possessive pronoun, acting as an adjective.
The abstract nouns in the sentence are education and defense.
The nouns in the sentence are:boyshoptrainers
The nouns in the sentence are: friends and wonder.