The old cat quietly purred near her in the garden.
Why= adverb is= verb it= pronoun important= adjective "to remember" is an infinitive phrase acting as an adjective. the= adjective lessons= noun of= preposition history= noun
"They" is a pronoun that is used to refer to a group of people or things. It is not a preposition, adverb, or adjective.
A noun, a noun clause, or a pronoun must necessarily follow a preposition in a sentence, but the following is not necessarily immediate. The immediately following word is often an article or an adjective.
No, it is not. It is a possessive adjective, third person singular. The related possessive pronoun is hers.
No. The word that can be used as an adjective, pronoun, or an adverb.
Noun, pronoun, verb, adjective, article, preposition, conjunction, inierjection
Can you make me examples of sentences with these orders?: 1.article-adjective-noun-verb-preposition-adjective. 2. helping verb-pronoun-verb-preposition-verb-article-noun?. 3. verb-article-noun-adverd 4.proper noun-conunction-pronounn-helping verb-verb-adverb 5. pronoun-helping verb-adverb-verb-pronoun 6. preposition-pronoun adjective-noun-pronoun-helping verb-verb-pronoun
Why= adverb is= verb it= pronoun important= adjective "to remember" is an infinitive phrase acting as an adjective. the= adjective lessons= noun of= preposition history= noun
"They" is a pronoun that is used to refer to a group of people or things. It is not a preposition, adverb, or adjective.
A noun, a noun clause, or a pronoun must necessarily follow a preposition in a sentence, but the following is not necessarily immediate. The immediately following word is often an article or an adjective.
What was the name of his college? (The name of his college was what?)What - interrogative pronoun, functioning as a predicate nominative;was - linking verb;the - article;name - noun, functioning as subject of the sentence;of - preposition;his - pronoun (possessive adjective), describes the noun 'college';college - noun, object of the preposition 'of'.
Adjective: amazing Adverb: quickly Preposition: on Pronoun: it
No, it is not a preposition. It is a pronoun also used as a noun, adjective, and adverb.no it is not
With her Russian blood, SHE will save us.
No. The word that can be used as an adjective, pronoun, or an adverb.
No, it is not. It is a possessive adjective, third person singular. The related possessive pronoun is hers.
The sentence contains one pronoun, one verb, one preposition, one definite article, one adjective and one common noun.