No. Pizza (the food) is a noun. Its use with other words (pizza pan, pizza toppings) is a noun adjunct, not a characteristic of those objects.
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
If a sentence has one adjective, then a comma is not necessary after the adjective. Example: She is a beautifulwoman.However, if there is a series of adjectives (coordinate adjectives) modifying the same noun, then a comma (or and) is necessary to separate the adjectives. Example: She is a beautiful, smart woman. She is a beautiful and smartwoman.
Yes, it is an adjective. it is the comparative form of the adjective 'scary.'
The compound noun pizza shop does not have an adjective form. The word pizza is used as a noun adjunct (attributive noun) in terms such as pizza delivery and pizza parlor.
"Pizza is popular with children and adults."The adjective 'popular' is the predicate adjective, restating the subject noun 'pizza' following the linking verb 'is'.
No. Terrific is an adjective. An adjective is used to describe a noun. For example, "That was terrific pizza!"
Pizza deliziosa is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "delicious pizza." The feminine singular noun and adjective literally translate by word order into English as "pizza delicious" since Italian generally puts an adjective after its noun. The pronunciation will be "PEET-tsa DEY-lee-TSYO-sa" in Italian.
yes
Example pronouns for the term "my pizza" are:my pizza; the word 'my' is a pronoun, a possessive adjective describing the pizza as belonging to the speaker.it; the personal pronoun 'it' takes the place of the term 'my pizza', a singular inanimate thing. (This is my pizza. I'm going to eat it.)mine; the possessive pronoun'mine' takes the place of the noun 'pizza' as the object of the verb. (This pizza is mine.)Examples of pronouns for the term "Ishaq and Rashid's pizza" are:their pizza; the plural possessive adjective 'their' describes the pizza as belonging to two or more people.it; the personal pronoun 'it' takes the place of the term 'my pizza', a singular inanimate thing. (This is Ishaq and Rashid's pizza. They are going to eat it.)theirs; the possessive pronoun'theirs' take the place of the noun 'pizza' as the object of the verb. (This pizza is theirs.)
No; it is an adjective meaning whole or complete: he ate the entire pizza himself.
depends how they are using it, is it describing somthing? ex. he has an extra pizza- that's describing so its an adj. but mostly most of the time it is an adjective
Yes, for example "I would like one large cheesy pizza" One, large, and cheesy all describe pizza, and as we all know adjectives describe nouns in a sentence (pizza being the noun).
Pizza ultima is an Italian equivalent of 'ultimate pizza'. In the word by word translation, the feminine gender noun 'pizza' takes 'la' ['the'] as its definite article and 'una' ['a, one'] as its indefinite. The feminine adjective 'ultima' means 'ultimate'. The phrase is pronounced 'PEETS-tsah OOL-tee-mah'.Another equivalent is 'pizza definitiva'. The feminine adjective 'definitiva' may be translated as 'ultimate, definitive'. The phrase is pronounced 'PEETS-tsah deh-fee-nee-TEE-vah'.
The proper adjective for the proper noun Italy is Italian.
verb: make Making pizza is what I love to do. Home-made cookies are more delicious.