Canada is a proper noun, as are the names of all countries.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.
The word canadian is a noun.
It is a proper noun when referring to the language.
No, it is an adjective.
yes
No, the noun Canadian Airways is a proper noun, the name of a company. Both words of a proper noun are capitalized. A common noun is a word for any person, place, or thing. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing. Canadian Airways is the name of a thing.
British, American, or Canadian, the word hospital can be a collective noun for patients.
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun Toronto (a large Canadian city).
When a proper noun is used as and adjective, it is a proper adjective; for example:Ancient Mexican structures have similarities to ancient Egyptian structures.
A proper adjective is a descriptive word derived from a proper noun.Some examples are:Asia (proper noun) - Asian (proper adjective)Brazil (proper noun) - Brazilian (proper adjective)Canada (proper noun) - Canadian (proper adjective)Elizabeth I (proper noun) - Elizabethan (proper adjective)Sigmund Freud (proper noun) - Freudian (proper adjective)George Orwell (proper noun) - Orwellian (proper adjective)Proper nouns and proper adjectives are always capitalized.
Canadian is a Proper noun (a name).
No, the word Canadian is not an adverb.The word Canadian is a noun and an adjective.
No, the noun Canadian Airways is a proper noun, the name of a company. Both words of a proper noun are capitalized. A common noun is a word for any person, place, or thing. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing. Canadian Airways is the name of a thing.
No, the noun Canadian Airways is a proper noun, the name of a company. Both words of a proper noun are capitalized. A common noun is a word for any person, place, or thing. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing. Canadian Airways is the name of a thing.
In the phrase Canadian citizens, the word Canadian is an adjective, as it modifies, or more clearly defines, the noun, citizens. A pronoun is a word that replaces the noun, like it, she or they.
"Canadian" can be a demonym or noun that refers to someone from Canada. It is not a pronoun, which is used to replace a noun in a sentence.
Yes, you should capitalize the word "Canadian" when it is used as a proper noun to refer to a person from Canada or an attribute specifically related to Canada. For example, "Canadian food" or "Canadian culture."
The proper noun, a Canadian province, is Saskatchewan.
British, American, or Canadian, the word hospital can be a collective noun for patients.
The proper adjective or noun in English is Canadian (of or from Canada, a person from Canada). The French spelling canadien is a French Canadian (male), female canadienne.
The proper noun, a Canadian town, is spelled Powassan.
Loud and soft are not proper adjectives. The easiest way to remember what proper adjectives are is that they are usually adjectives which are similar to their proper noun form. For example, Canada is a proper noun. Canadian, when used to describe a noun, such as, Canadian bacon, is the proper adjective.