Some nouns as adjectives are:
Some proper nouns as proper adjectives:
If a noun is acting as an adjective, it's an adjective.
For example:
Math (noun) -- Bobby does well in math.
Math (adjective) -- Mr. Smith is a math teacher. (Teacher is the noun; math is the adjective.)
The nouns acting as adjectives or proper adjectives are:baseball gamebig league ballparkCubs fan
Proper nouns are always capitalised, but adjectives are not.
Television and family are the only adjectives in the sentence. There are no proper adjectives.
clay, tennis
nouns
The nouns acting as adjectives or proper adjectives are:baseball gamebig league ballparkCubs fan
The nouns acting as adjectives or proper adjectives are:baseball gamebig league ballparkCubs fan
Proper nouns are always capitalised, but adjectives are not.
Television and family are the only adjectives in the sentence. There are no proper adjectives.
clay, tennis
Clay tennis
Baseball, Clubs
clay (clay courts) and tennis (tennis shoes)
nouns
No, not all pronouns, proper nouns, and adjectives are capitalized. Only proper nouns, such as names of specific people, places, or things, are capitalized. Pronouns and regular adjectives are not usually capitalized unless they appear at the beginning of a sentence or are part of a proper noun.
Yes, proper nouns and proper adjectives are always capitalized.Examples:Toyota (proper noun)Chinese food (proper adjective)Eiffel Tower (compound proper noun)Elizabethan architecture (proper adjective)
Proper adjectives are formed from proper nouns which are also capitalized. Example: I like American pancakes better than Swedish pancakes and French crepes.