Yes, nautical is an adjective.
notorious nautical nerdy
· naïve · nappy · narrow · nasty · natural · naughty · nauseating · nautical
If you're talking about the nautical sense, then it's royals, but royal is usually used as an adjective, not a noun.
Only in an archaic nautical sense. Large is otherwise an adjective, or more rarely a noun (size).
San Antonio is located on the river and is nautical. San Antonio is a neighborly city.
No. The word knot is a noun, meaning a twist in a rope. The unit of speed 'knot' means "nautical mile per hour."
Not usually. There are two rare cases: - The archaic use to mean later : his after years - The nautical use meaning the aft or rear of a ship: the after end of the ship
Nautical chart
The word "found" is a verb, the past tense of to find. But it can also be used as an adjective, rarely, as in "found money" or the nautical term "well found" (provisioned). For the verb "to found" (establish), the adjective form is "founded."
An synony for Nautical is deep-sea.
nautical is one of my favorite theme's
a nautical mile is 1.852 km and a mile is (statute)1.609344 km so a mile is bigger than a nautical mile