Noun. A+
The standard collective noun for the noun 'class' is 'a class of students'.Example: A class of students painted the mural in the school lobby.The noun 'class' is a general collective noun for groups of people or things.Example: We cater to a very selective class of clients.
To remind someone of what they actually are in terms of wealth, social status/class etc.
Marlowe's use of the phrase, "base of stock" simply means that Faustus came from a lower-class farming family.
The minuscule amount of water in the cup was not enough to survive on.
This is a class A misdemeanor. A class A misdemeanor is the most serious type of misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in jail and a fine of up to $5,000.
In his tuxedo, he exuded elegance and sophistication, embodying the essence of class and refinement.
"we" is a pronoun."class" is a noun.The entire phrase--"We will not have a class."--is a complete sentence.
"The tallest person in the class" is the appositive phrase that renames or describes Ryan.
Subject: each student Verbs: has brought Objects: his book, paper, pencil Prepositional phrase: to class
The prepositional phrase is "inside the incubator" and functions as an adverb.
The class structure of First Grade contained 18 girls and 19 boys.In a culture, class structure often keeps poor or uneducated persons from moving into a higher social class.
The highest-quality tuxedo would have to be custom-made by a world-class tailor. A bespoke tuxedo from one of the tailors on Savile Row in London would be a strong contender. In fact, Henry Poole & Co, a Savile Row tailor, is credited with making the world's first tuxedo back in the 1860s.
The underlined phrase "for 35 years" is an adverb phrase in the sentence "Mr. Bruns had been teaching for 35 years." It describes the duration of time for which Mr. Bruns had been teaching.
The judge gave him a light sentence, it was just a slap on the wrist.
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun phrase 'the math class' as subject of a sentence or a clause is it.Example: The math class starts at ten. It is in room two hundred.The pronoun it will also function as the object of a verb or a preposition.
The professor teaching Communications in the Community started off class asking the rhetorical question, "Should we talk to walls?"
First, find the subject of the sentence. In this case, the subject is "all," which is a plural subject. It refers to a group-- All boys; all girls; all Americans, etc. But I know what is confusing: "of the class." The short answer is, don't worry about it. Any time you see words like "of", "in", "to", "with," etc, these are all prepositions and this means there's a prepositional phrase coming. Examples: of the class, in the room, at the bus stop, with my friends...-- these are all prepositional phrases. The reason I am mentioning this is a prepositional phrase cannot be the subject of a sentence. For example: the color of his eyes is blue. (Eyes is not the subject. Color is the subject. As for "eyes," it is part of a prepositional phrase-- "of his eyes", and it cannot be the subject. If there were no prepositional phrase, you could say His eyes are blue.) So, just make the prepositional phrase vanish, and you have the subject all by itself. Thus, All (ignore "of the class") are good.