The school teaches that this is and adjective."Aborigine" is the noun form. "Aboriginal" is the adjective form.
The word 'aboriginal' is both an adjective and a noun.The noun 'aboriginal' is a word for someone belonging to one of the indigenous peoples of Australia; a word for a person.
Strictly speaking, no. "Aborigines" refers to the noun, the actual people, and should always be capitalised; "aboriginal" is an adjective, I.e. referring to "aboriginal people".
The word 'aboriginal' is both an adjective and a noun.The adjective 'aboriginal' describes a noun for a person or thing as having existed from the beginning.The noun 'aboriginal' is a word for a person or thing that is indigenous to a place from the beginning.The word 'Aboriginal' (capital A) is also a proper adjective and a proper noun, describing a person or a word for a person indigenous to Australia, predating the arrival of Europeans.
You don't.Aboriginal is an adjective, and it should be written as just aboriginal when describing a culture, e.g. aboriginal tools, aboriginal housing.The word Aborigine is a proper noun because it refers to a race of people.The terms aboriginal and Aborigine are often mixed up.
The correct spelling of the adjective is aboriginal(pertaining to native inhabitants).
The noun 'aboriginal' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for the inhabitant (human, animal, or plant) of a place from the earliest times; a word for a person or a thing.The word 'aboriginal' is also an adjective.
No it is not, it is a name given to the natives of a place.
define aboriginal
Aboriginal.
he has aboriginal heritage
yes shannon rusca is a aboriginal yes shannon rusca is a aboriginal