No. Historical is an adjective. It is, however, derived from the root 'history'.
A derived noun is a noun that is based mostly on verbs.Examples of derived nouns:combinationconclusiondegradationestimationformalizationglamorizationimplicationjustificationnavigationnominationorganizationpopularizationunificationvisualization
That is the noun.
The word 'gigantic' is the adjective form of the noun giant.
The noun form of the adjective 'precipitous' is precipitousness.A related noun form is precipice.
A derived noun is a noun that is based mostly on verbs.Examples of derived nouns:combinationconclusiondegradationestimationformalizationglamorizationimplicationjustificationnavigationnominationorganizationpopularizationunificationvisualization
The noun derived from the verb "conceal" is "concealment." This noun refers to the act of hiding or keeping something out of sight.
The noun 'denominal' is a word derived from a noun.examples: noun, fish; verb, fish: noun, village; noun, villager: noun, paper; verb, paper: adjective, paper.The adjective 'denominal' describes a word as derived from a noun.
The word 'historical' is the adjective form of the abstract noun history.
The noun form for the adjective historical is historicalness.
The sit of a jacket (The way in which an article of clothing fits)
The adjective global is derived from the noun globe.
manless, adjective man·less·ly, adverb man·less·ness, noun manness, noun are derived from the root word "man."