Yes, the word traditional is an adjective.
Yes it can be used as an adjective.
The word 'former' is an adjective, in past-tense.
it's a noun. Can't think of a use as adjective.
The adjective form would be 'style-less' or 'style-like'. Stylish is an adjective that means having a good sense of style.
The word century is a common noun. The word tenth is functioning as an adjective (not a noun) decribing the noun century.
It should be hyphenated when it's being used as an adjective. For example: nineteenth-century writers.
No, "nineteenth-century" should not be capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title.
The word century is a common noun. The word fifteenth is functioning as an adjective (not a noun) decribing the noun century.
Only if it's being used as an adjective.
The word century is a common noun. The word fifteenth is functioning as an adjective (not a noun) decribing the noun century.
Early 16th century (as an adjective in the sense 'internal'): from French interne (adjective), interner (verb), from Latin internus 'inward, internal.'
...European powers... European is the adjective, modifying the word powers; but it should be capitalized.
Eighteen can be both an adjective, meaning one more than seventeen, or a noun meaning the cardinal number that is the sum of seventeen and one.
The word "festival" was originally used as an adjective from the late fourteenth century.
A tale is another word for legend. Folktales and myths are not legends. Legends are unclear if they are true.
Yes, the compound noun 'nineteenth century' is a common noun, a general word for the one hundred years between 1801-1900; a general word for any point in the 1800s.The word 'nineteenth century' also functions as an adjective.