Yes, it is. It is the adjective form of the noun 'province' and can mean related to a province, or not fashionable, or narrow.
Provincial is an adjective.
The word 'provincial' is a noun as well as an adjective. The noun 'provincial' is a word for a person of or from a province; an unsophisticated person, a rural person. Another noun form is 'province'.
No. Ischigualasto is a proper noun, a region in Argentina and the name of a provincial park (nature preserve) there.
I think you would still use "state", because that's the adjective form of "state"
Provincial is an adjective used to describe people or things related to the province. It is usually used as a pejorative term to refer to uneducated and isolated rural people.
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Alberta has 75 provincial parks, including the following:Writing-on-stone Provincial ParkLesser Slave Provincial ParkAspen Beach Provincial ParkBeauvais Lake Provincial ParkCalling Lake Provincial ParkLakeland Provincial ParkQueen Elizabeth Provincial ParkPolice Outpost Provincial ParkSaskatoon Island Provincial ParkThunder Lake Provincial ParkWilliamson Provincial ParkA more complete list can be found in the related link below.
Ontario has more than 300 Provincial Parks. Below are 5 random provincial Parks... Algonquin Provincial Park Arrow Lake Provincial Park Polar Bear Provincial Park Pancake Bay Provincial Park Turkey Point Provincial Park
The Provincial symbols of the Sindh are as the following:* Sindh ibex (Capra aegagrus blythi) - Provincial animal* Sindh sparrow (Passer pyrrhonotus) - Provincial bird* Nerium oleander - Provincial flower* Egyptian thorn (Acacia nilotica) - Provincial tree
Provincial trial court, superior provincial court, provincial court of appeal
Geographic is an adjective that means terrestrial. Some synonyms for the word geographic are earthly, topographical, and geological. Related words are district, divisional, provincial, and sectional.
The provincial trial court does not, but the superior provincial court might.