Examples of 'nouns have' in a sentence

Meaning of "nouns have"

nouns have: Used to indicate possession of nouns or that nouns are currently possessing something

How to use "nouns have" in a sentence

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nouns have
All nouns have a conventional grammatical gender.
They are reminded that all nouns have a gender.
Weak nouns have their own endings.
According to Miller, only nouns have legal authority.
Nouns have plural and singular forms.
Uncountable nouns have no plural form.
Nouns have an either masculine or feminine gender.
Many participles and verbal nouns have acquired an extended sense.
Nouns have no special endings or declensions.
A relatively small number of masculine nouns have a nominative singular ending in a vowel.
Most nouns have singular and plural numbers.
In Armenian, neither pronouns nor nouns have grammatical gender.
Masculine nouns have a double diminutive form.
Like Spanish and French, Greek nouns have gender.
Very few nouns have an unclear gender.

See also

Feminine nouns - almost all feminine nouns have an - n or - en ending.
Some nouns have no singular form.
Here is how to tell the difference, people have sex, and nouns have gender.
Most nouns have inherent gender.
In Hindi, all the nouns have genders.
Most nouns have a singular and a plural form.
Like many Australian languages, Guugu Yimithirr pronouns have accusative morphology while nouns have ergative morphology.
Nouns have no specific ending.
All Italian nouns have a gender.
Nouns have prefixes that show agreement with a possessor.
A few neuter nouns have a plural in - eren.
Nouns have specific jobs to do when placed within a sentence.
However, some French nouns have distinguishable spoken plural forms.
Nouns have separate endings only in the possessive case and the plural number.
In English, some plurale tantum nouns have a singular form, used only attributively.
Some nouns have an alternative stem which is used with certain suffixes.
Inflection and conjugation Japanese nouns have no grammatical number, gender or article aspect.
Many nouns have a special plural form if there is more than one.
Some feminine -i- stem nouns have become masculine.
Common nouns have often been used as subjects in sentences.
Nouns are unaffected by number, i.e. nouns have the same form in singular and plural.
Some nouns have the same stem but have a different generic and particular meaning.
Second-declension masculine nouns have a regular vocative ending in -ε.
Some nouns have a different in singular and plural,.
As in Hebrew, Native American nouns have neither cases nor declensions, wrote Adair.
Nouns have no grammatical number or gender, and there are no articles.
Dependent nouns have to be learned separately.
Nouns have grammatical gender ( masculine and feminine ) and number singular and plural.
Counted nouns have two forms.
Some nouns have two or more plural forms, usually to distinguish between different meanings.
Positive and neutral nouns have a value of 1 and negative nouns have a value of -1.
Nouns have four cases and three genders ; all form plural by adding - s.
Neuter nouns have become feminine.
Nouns have 18 cases, which are formed regularly with suffixes.
Proper nouns have been omitted.

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Examples of using Nouns
The nouns specify the points to be observed
Understands that certain nouns should be capitalized
Many nouns can also be used as verbs
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Examples of using Have
These documents have been in my family for centuries
Have this done by the customer service only
He could not have chosen a worse time
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