In the sentence "Dawson went to the museum with his cousin," the nouns are "Dawson," "museum," and "cousin." "Dawson" refers to a person, "museum" refers to a place, and "cousin" refers to a family relationship. These nouns represent the subjects and objects within the sentence.
The nouns in the sentence "Their daughter Mary is your favorite cousin" are "daughter," "Mary" (a proper noun), and "cousin."
The nouns in the sentence are:museumitemscowboys
Rina is my cousinRima is my cousin
The nouns in the sentence are:museumhistoryairplanes
The compound nouns in the sentence are:contact lensshag rugbedroom
Three proper nouns: Ann, Minneapolis, and Chicago.
The adjective in the sentence is "distant." It describes the noun "cousin," indicating the nature of their relationship. Adjectives provide more information about nouns, and in this case, "distant" conveys that the cousin is not close or nearby.
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.
Proper nouns don't change from language to language. It would simply be "dawson".
The nouns in the sentence are frogs, place, and place.