"Melina and her mother, Emma, traveled with their pet dog from Cuba to Germany, then to Italy, and to Spain where they bought silver bracelets and saw a bullfight."
(10 nouns are: Melina and Emma as proper nouns; mother and dog as nouns; Cuba, Germany, Italy, and Spain as places; bracelet and bullfight as nouns. The word pet is a noun adjunct.)
However, sentences do not have to seem long to have many nouns.
"When the tall man in a top hat entered the shop, the owner thought for a moment of his school days, and the drawings of Abraham Lincoln giving his speech at Gettysburg."
(10 nouns are : man, hat, shop, owner, moment, days, drawings, Lincoln, speech, Gettysburg)
The Millers barbecue featured steaks, hamburgers, hot dogs, salads, roasted potatoes, with drinks, melons,strawberries and a whole bunch of people.
Count nouns are nouns that can be counted, for example: bed, cat, movie, train, cousin, country. Non-count nouns are nouns that can't be counted, for example: knowledge, weather, electricity, flour, biology.
Abstract nouns are sometimes referred to as special nouns. Abstract nouns are words for things that can't be experienced by any of the five senses; they can't be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. Abstract nouns are words for things that are known, learned, understood, believed, or felt emotionally.Examples are:attitudebeliefcharmdangeremotionfeargenerosityhappinessignoranceknowledge
An example of a sentence with might and mite is "The mite might be trapped by the fluid".
I believe this question is missing a list of words, as there are more than three words that are not nouns (as there are over 20, not including pronouns, in this sentence alone).However, just for fun, here are three words that are not nouns that begin with the letter w:WigglyWhiffedWeird
The nouns in the example sentence are:worrieshost
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.
Nouns: "The cat" Pronouns: "He"
Example sentence: The dog was ready for some food.
The nouns in your sentence are group, nouns, and sentence.
The two nouns, 'nouns' and 'sentence' are placed correctly in your sentence.
There are no collective nouns in the example sentence. A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way. The nouns 'faculty' and 'council' are sometimes used as collective nouns, but in the example sentence, they're not used to group anyone in particular, They're used as singular nouns to identify the parties involved in the planned meeting.
In the question above, nouns and sentence are the only nouns. Neither of which are proper nouns.
it's control
The nouns in the sentence are frogs, place, and place.
the answer of that is the answer that answer the answer
Example tacky sentence with proper nouns (in bold):If a fat man puts you in a bag one night, don't worry, I told Santa that I wanted you for Christmas.