In the first sentence, both "checkers" and "game" are nouns, right? Person, place, or thing. You can also test for most nouns by putting a "the" in front of it. (Usually not proper nouns.)
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of the noun so that we are not always speaking only with nouns. How awkward would that be?
What is the word in the second sentence that refers to (in this case) both "Checkers" and "game"?
You could say this, right? — "The game was played in Egypt over 4,000 years ago." But it's smoother to switch to the pronoun here by saying "IT was played in Egypt over 4,000 years ago."
In the
sentence we can observe that the noun here is described by “two friends”. Hence
by identifying this noun we can say that this noun is a:
<span><span>
1. </span>Common nouns are type of nouns which
refers to a set of objects, individuals or events without particularity.
</span>
<span><span>2. </span>Plural nouns are nouns that exceed
more than one idea, object or animal.</span>
<span><span>3.
</span>Concrete
nouns are nouns that can be felt by the different senses, see, hear, smell,
touch and feel.</span>
<span><span>
4.
</span>Count
nouns are nouns that are realistic and can be counted and tallied. </span>
Answer:
Shelley's description of the statue works to reconstruct, gradually, the figure of the “king of kings”: first we see merely the “shattered visage,” then the face itself, with its “frown / And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command”; then we are introduced to the figure of the sculptor, and are able to imagine the ...
hope it will help you
This act of 1689 allowed , Freedom of worship to Nonconformists in which they have pledged an oath of Allegiance and Supremacy and also rejected transubstantiation : F.Y.I ( For your Information ) Protestants who dissented from he church of England. Such s Baptists , Congregationalists but not Catholics.
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