Yes, it is an adjective describing people or things in or from Italy. It can also refer to things associated with Italy's culture. The word Italian is also a demonym (noun) for a person in or from Italy (an Italian), or referring to the language Italian.
Venetian is the proper adjective for Venice.
Roman is the proper adjective for Rome.
Vietnamese is the proper adjective for Vietnam.
The proper adjective for the proper noun 'Celt' is Celtic.Please note that a proper noun and a proper adjective is always capitalized.
Ghanian is the proper adjective for Ghana.
Venetian is the proper adjective for Venice.
The proper adjective for the proper noun Italy is Italian.
No, Franz is a proper noun (Frank or Francis are western versions of it). The names of people and places are generally proper nouns. A proper adjective is a word whose root is a proper noun-- like "Italy" is a proper noun, and Italian is a proper adjective: that new Italian restaurant is wonderful.
Elizabethan, Italian, Norwegian, Carolingian.
A proper adjective is a word to describe a noun that is derived from a proper noun; for example, Swiss cheese, Italian leather, Peruvian pottery, Florida orange juice, etc.
A common adjective describes a general characteristic of a noun, while a proper adjective is derived from a proper noun and specifically identifies a particular noun. For example, "blue" is a common adjective, while "Italian" is a proper adjective derived from the proper noun "Italy."
Roman is the proper adjective for Rome.
The English phrase "Italian meal" is correct as written since English capitalizes the proper noun-related adjective Italian but not the common noun meal.
Vietnamese is the proper adjective for Vietnam.
In English, the word 'Italian' can be an adjective or a noun depending on its use. In the sentence 'She is Italian' and 'this is an Italian car' the word 'Italian' is an adjective. In the sentences 'Here come the Italians' and 'Is he an Italian' the word 'Italian' is a noun.
The proper adjective for George is Georgian.
The proper adjective for Siam is Siamese.