Sandwich is not an adjective. It is a noun and does not describe anything. "Sand" might be a word, but "wich" is not. Sandwich is actually named after The Duke of Sandwich, a place in England. Therefore, sandwich is neither compound nor an adjective.
No. Hero is a noun. The adjective form is heroic.(in the compound noun hero sandwich, hero is acting as a noun adjunct)
HH
No
compound
Yes, it is. It is a compound form that can be an adjective (used with a noun) or an adverb.
sourdough. It is made up of two words sour and dough. In the sentence it describes the bread. Sourdough is a compound word. It can be an adjective but it isn't a compound adjective. The sentence isn't written correctly to indentify any compound adjectives . It should be "She ordered a sourdough-ham sandwich." Sourdough-ham would be the compound adjective.
No. Hero is a noun. The adjective form is heroic.(in the compound noun hero sandwich, hero is acting as a noun adjunct)
Yes, "sandwich" is a compound word because it is made up of two separate words, "sand" and "wich," that are combined to create a new word with a distinct meaning.
Compound adjective is the proper spelling of this phrase.
it is a noun...
Penny-pinching is a compound adjective for a miser. Another compound adjective is Scrooge-like.
Penny-pinching is a compound adjective for a miser. Another compound adjective is Scrooge-like.
HH
that is element
that is element
No
Compound adjectives are only compound before the noun.