Pilot can be an adjective, a verb or a noun.
In "pilot error" it refers to the role (guide), while in "pilot project" it means initial or test.
The word pilot is a noun and a verb, it can also be an adjective. Examples:As a noun: The ship's pilot will arrive at 3:00 PM.As a verb: This is the first time that I pilot the plane solo.As an adjective: He will complete his pilot training this month.
The word pilot is a verb, a noun, or an adjective; not an adverb. Example uses:Verb: They hire someone with experience to pilot the ship through the canal.Noun: The pilot of the plane made the difficult landing look easy.Adjective: It was so successful as a pilot project that it became established procedure.
No, it is a noun. If it is used with another noun (e.g. helicopter pilot), it is a noun adjunct, not an adjective.
Frantic, religious
The clause "who can cook " is basically an adjective clause because it refers to a noun.For example:The pilot who can cook prepared the food for the survivors." who can cook " refers to pilot.*The question is also whether it is a restrictive or non-restrictive clause. If the pilot is the only one of the pilots who can cook, it is a restrictive clause (the one who can). If the pilot just happens to be able to cook, it is a non-restrictive clause set off by commas, e.g.The pilot, who can cook, prepared the food for the survivors.
It can be, when it means "to steer a ship or an aircraft." It is also a noun for a person who does so. It can also be an adjective means done as a test before introducing something else.
Pilot
I believe Pilot is a Newfoundland.
The name for the aeroplane pilot is simply pilot. The pilot is usually a Captain.
A female airplane pilot is simply a pilot. She could be a Captain.
Some verbs about airplanes:flytransporttaxitake offlandSome nouns about airplanes:passengerscargofuelpilotseats
Pilot