The word landscape is used as an adjunct (adjective) in most cases. These include landscape plants and landscape painters.
It can be an adjective, but it is usually a verb or a noun. When used with another noun as in landscape artist, it is functioning as a noun adjunct. However, when used in another sense, to mean a type of orientation (e.g. landscape view), it can indeed be considered an adjective.
No, the compound word 'landscape' is a noun (landscape, landscapes) and a verb (landscape, landscapes, landscaping, landscaped).The noun 'landscape' is a word for an are that can be seen in a single view; a area of a type of view; a picture or drawing of an area or view; the configuration of a page or picture that is wider than it is tall; a word for a thing.The verb 'landscape' is to improve a piece of land by alteration of its appearance.Examples:Having grown up in a large city, he's always more comfortable in an urban landscape. (noun)As soon as we can afford it, we plan to landscape the yard. (verb)
Nouns like "picture" can have functions like adjectives in some cases. For example, in the phrase "a picture book" or "a picture gallery" it modifies the following noun. If used often enough in this way, the noun will become an adjective.
Usually said of a landscape, picturesque means "pretty as a picture, or suitable for a picture." There is no antonym for it, except to say in negation "unlike or unsuitable for a picture," or perhaps "non-photogenic." Many adjectives will serve, however, such as: unattractive, ugly, plain, charmless, dull etc. "We wanted a picturesque alpine village, and we found a squalid slum in the mountains."
A new marketing landscape analyzes needs and wants in a market. The new marketing landscape creates products and conveys messages to influence exchange.
It can be an adjective, but it is usually a verb or a noun. When used with another noun as in landscape artist, it is functioning as a noun adjunct. However, when used in another sense, to mean a type of orientation (e.g. landscape view), it can indeed be considered an adjective.
Magnificent is an adjective. For example: She painted a dramatic landscape of magnificent mountains. Magnificently, a derivative of magnificent, is an adverb.
The word "magnificent" is an adjective, as it describes or modifies a noun by expressing a high degree of excellence or grandeur.
Landscape - Landscape album - was created in 1979.
A portrait is the likeness of a person. A landscape is a landscape. You cannot have a landscape portrait.
Depending on how it's used, land can be a noun or a verb but not an adjective. As a noun: She lives on a beautiful piece of land. As a verb: Hopefully, the plane will land on time.
Jay Appleton has written: 'The funny thing about landscape' -- subject(s): Landscape protection 'The experience of landscape' -- subject(s): Landscape, Landscape in art 'The Aesthetics of Landscape'
It changes the landscape by blowing over or on the landscape
Yes, the word 'desert' 'desert' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a dry, barren area of land, a word for a place.The word 'desert' is also a verb and an adjective.
landscape painting
Im guessing that a natural landscape is...well natural. physical landscape is manmade.
The barren landscape of the Moon is unforgettable. The landscape is just breathtaking!