Adjective. This is because you can use the word before a noun and not before a verb. For example: He is a cultural man. If you say: He is cultural. The same rules of an adjective follow. Hope this helps!
No, cultural is an adjective. The adverb is culturally.
The word 'cultural' is the adjective form of the noun culture.
Cultural
There are cultural tours of art and architecture in the city. The cultural differences between the Greeks and Romans are numerous.
cultural
The term "cultural region" is a noun phrase, consisting of a noun (region) modified by an adjective (cultural) that describes the type of region.
When we use "culture" as an adjective, we are describing something that is related to or characteristic of a particular group of people or society. It can refer to customs, traditions, beliefs, or values that are shared among individuals within a specific community.
The class visited the City Cultural Center to see the European historical clothing display.
Alcuni festival culturali italiani is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "some Italian cultural festivals."Specifically, the word alcuni is "some." The masculine noun festivalmeans "festival" in the singular and "festivals" in the plural. The masculine adjective culturali means "cultural." The masculine adjective italiani translates as "Italian."The pronunciation will be "al-KOO-nee FEH-stee-val KOOL-too-RA-lee-ta-LYA-nee" in Italian.
Social is an adjective. Culture is a noun.Put them together and no good can come of it.
The term 'cultural borrowing' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit as a noun in a sentence.The noun phrase 'cultural borrowing' is made up of the adjective 'cultural' which describes the noun(gerund) 'borrowing'.Example uses of a noun phrase:Cultural borrowing occurs all over the world. (subject of the sentence)Globalization has vastly increased cultural borrowing. (direct object of the verb 'has increased')Language is a major source of cultural borrowing. (object of the preposition 'of')