No, the term 'cauliflower cheese' is a common noun.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing; for example:
No. Cauliflower cheese is not a proper noun and only the word cauliflower would have a capital on the first letter if it started a sentence.
Cauliflower with cheese.
Yes, St. Bernard the saint and the breed of dog are both proper nouns. When a proper noun is used to name another thing, the thing it names is also a proper noun. For example, Swiss cheese is a proper noun, mozzarella cheese is not; or a St. Bernard is a proper noun and a collie is not.
Countable as what? Personally, I like eating cauliflower (either with or without a cheese sauce), but my wife can't stand the smell! It is another vegetable that can be added to your five a day, enjoy.
Cauliflower cheese is traditionally a British dish. The dish consist of cauliflower, a cheddar cheese sauce, a Bechamel sauce flavored with cheese, English mustard, nutmeg and breadcrumbs.
Yes, only the proper name "Swiss" is capitalized; cheese is a common noun.
American is a proper noun. It can also be an adjective, as in "American cheese." A rule of thumb: proper nouns are capitalized and common nouns are not capitalized.
FruitfruitIt is actually now cauliflower cheese and candyflossice cream and jelly!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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.
No. Parmesan is an adjective because it is describing the type of cheese it is. But sometimes it can be a proper noun. If it is used in the context; "Can you pass the Parmesan?" then yes it would be because "Parmesan" is not describing anything. Parmesan (Parmigiano Reggiano in Italian), is a proper noun because the cheese originated in the Parma Region of Italy, it is named after a place.
There is no proper adjective for 'innovative'. A proper adjective is an adjective derived from a proper noun, for example an Orwellian plot, a Rubenesque figure, or Swiss Cheese.
Yes, the noun cheese is a common noun, a word for any cheese of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Wisconson, 'America's Dairyland' or 'The Cheese State'Cheese Road, Petersburg, TN or Cheese Run Road, Indiana, PAThe Cheese House, Plain City, OH"The Long Quiche Goodbye: A Cheese Shop Mystery" by Avery Aames