The lack of punctuation puzzled me for a time, but I would say so, since 'French' is describing 'word'.
"You" is not an adjective clause, or any other kind of clause, because it is a single word. "You" is a pronoun.
An introductory word of an adjective clause is a word that introduces the clause and provides context for the noun it is modifying. Common introductory words include who, which, that, whose, whom, where, and when.
It is a conjunction that connects an adverb clause (called a clause of concession). This would be more obvious if there were a comma displayed after the word old.
An adnominalizer is a suffix or particle which converts a word to adnominal form - a form which qualifies a noun, such as an adjective and relative clause.
No, the word French is not an adverb.The word French is an adjective and a noun.
Since when is "although" a clause?? I would consider "although" a word :o)Having said that, I believe your question is what type of clause "although" introduces: clauses of concession.Clauses of concession can also be introdcued by while, when, if, even if, even though.
yes
The word 'annual' is an adjective, not a clause. The adjective annual describes a noun as occurring once a year; the annualFall Festival, the annual report.The word 'annual' is also a noun, a word for a plant that lives for only one year, or a publication that is produced once a year.
"Adjectif" is the french for "Adjective"
The word impunis is an adjective in French. It is also an adjective in Latin.
Astronomy
No, bikini is not a French word. Although it was used in French.