A few days ago
pramod g

what about noun pronoun,verb,adverb?

psl

Top 5 Answers
A few days ago
bedbye

Favorite Answer

like above post PLUS

pronoun – takes the place of a proper noun (she, him, it, that)

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A few days ago
sixgun
not sure what the question is…

but a noun is like “Mary”, “California”, “Cell phone” , or “Freedom”

a pronoun is used when you don’t want to say the same noun over and over again.

“She”, “There”, “It”, “Them”

(a possesive pronoun is a pronoun that tells you that something belongs to something else–“Hers”, “Its”, “Theirs”)

a verb is what those nouns and pronouns are doing. grow, growing, grew—was, is, will be, –fall, falling, fell, etc.

Adverb is “how” the “nouns” are “verbing”–turning SLIGHTLY, OBNOXIOUSLY laughing, BARELY breathing.

Adverbs are also used all the time to describe adjectives:

SUPER fast, UNBELIEVABLY stupid, FOREST green.

Oh, and they can describe other adverbs too. (I hate that though) VERY cautiously, (I can’t think of any others right now!)

Careful to not assume any word ending with “ly” is an adverb== UGLY is an adjective.

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A few days ago
MadameZ
noun — person, place, thing, idea

verb – action word

adverb – describes the verb

The dog (noun) barked (verb) noisily (adverb).

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A few days ago
Fred
is your question what they are?

noun- person, place, or thing

pronoun- something that deserves capital letter (name of someone/something)

verb- action

adverb- i think its when you add ‘ly’ to the end of the word, but i’m not sure.

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A few days ago
Jenn
What is your question?
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