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).
"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.
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.
Yes, "Canadian" is a proper noun when used to refer to a person or thing of, from, or related to Canada.
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.
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.