Pie
Collective nouns for apples are a bushel of apples, a pie-full of apples.
The noun 'pie' is not a complement.In the given sentence, the noun 'pie' is the direct object of the verb 'baked'.The complete direct object is the noun phrase 'a fresh apple pie'.A complement can be a subject complement or an object complement.A subject complement is a noun or an adjective that follows a linking verb and restates the subject of the sentence, for example:"Dessert was a fresh apple pie." (dessert = pie, a noun)The fresh apple pie was delicious. (pie = delicious, an adjective)An object complement is a noun that follows a direct object and restates it, for example:Susan served dessert, a fresh apple pie. (the noun 'pie' restates the direct object 'dessert' / dessert = pie)
Yes, apple is a noun, a thing; apple is a singular, common, concrete noun. The word apple is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun, for example apple pie or apple juice.
Shoal is a collective noun. It is the collective noun for fish. A shoal of fish.The collective noun is a mint of candies
The collective nouns for apples are:a basket of applesa bushel of applesa pie-full of applesa crop of apples
Pie
There is no collective noun for pomes, however you can borrow the collective noun for apples, a bushel of pomes or a pie-full of pomes.
No, the word 'have' is a verb (have, has, having, had), meaning to possess, to own, to experience.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.Examples:My mother made a pie. (the noun 'mother' is a word for a person, the noun 'pie' is a word for a thing)My mother made a batch of pies. (the noun 'batch' is a collective noun used to group a number of pies)We will have pie for dinner.
Collective nouns for apples are a bushel of apples, a pie-full of apples.
No, the noun 'apple' is a common noun, a general word for a type of fruit. It is capitalized in the example sentence because it is the first word in the sentence.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'apple' is the name of someone or something specific, for example, the Golden Apple Inn in Glen, NH or Apple, Inc. in Cupertino, CA.
The noun 'pie' is not a complement.In the given sentence, the noun 'pie' is the direct object of the verb 'baked'.The complete direct object is the noun phrase 'a fresh apple pie'.A complement can be a subject complement or an object complement.A subject complement is a noun or an adjective that follows a linking verb and restates the subject of the sentence, for example:"Dessert was a fresh apple pie." (dessert = pie, a noun)The fresh apple pie was delicious. (pie = delicious, an adjective)An object complement is a noun that follows a direct object and restates it, for example:Susan served dessert, a fresh apple pie. (the noun 'pie' restates the direct object 'dessert' / dessert = pie)
The noun 'pie' is not a complement.In the given sentence, the noun 'pie' is the direct object of the verb 'baked'.The complete direct object is the noun phrase 'a fresh apple pie'.A complement can be a subject complement or an object complement.A subject complement is a noun or an adjective that follows a linking verb and restates the subject of the sentence, for example:"Dessert was a fresh apple pie." (dessert = pie, a noun)The fresh apple pie was delicious. (pie = delicious, an adjective)An object complement is a noun that follows a direct object and restates it, for example:Susan served dessert, a fresh apple pie. (the noun 'pie' restates the direct object 'dessert' / dessert = pie)
Yes, apple is a noun, a thing; apple is a singular, common, concrete noun. The word apple is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun, for example apple pie or apple juice.
No, 'chicken pie' is a singular, common, compound, concrete noun; a word for a thing.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or a fanciful way. There are nouns that are by definition words for a group (crowd, flock, fleet, etc.) and some nouns that are standard collective nouns (a panel of judges or a cloud of mosquitoes) but used in another context are not collective nouns.
wow apple+pie= apple pie
Apple pie