The word 'African' is both a noun and an adjective.
The noun 'African' is a word for a person of or from the continent of Africa.
The word 'Africa' is a noun form as a word for a continent, a word for a thing.
The noun form of "African" is "African." It refers to a person from Africa or things related to the continent of Africa.
The proper noun for African is Africa.
Yes, the word 'African' is a noun, a proper noun; a word for a person of or from Africa.The word 'African' is also a proper adjective, used to describe a noun as of or from Africa.
The plural form of the noun African is Africans.The plural possessive form is Africans'.Example: The Africans' contribution to our music history is unmistakable.
No, the word African is not a pronoun, it is an adjective. It modifies a noun. I spoke to an African man. Man is a noun, modified by African. That is the kind of man he was, African. A pronoun stands in place of a noun. I could have said I spoke to him, in which case "him" replaces African man. So the word him is a pronoun.
The plural possessive form of "African" is "Africans'".
The proper noun for African is Africa.
Yes, the word 'African' is a noun, a proper noun; a word for a person of or from Africa.The word 'African' is also a proper adjective, used to describe a noun as of or from Africa.
In the term 'African music', the word 'African' is a proper adjective that describes the noun 'music'. The proper noun 'African' is a person from the continent of Africa.
The word African as in African music is a proper adjective.The proper noun African is a word for a person of or from Africa. Example:My uncle is African, he was born in Zimbabwe.
The noun 'African' is a proper noun, a word for a person or thing of or from the continent of Africa.The adjective 'African' is a proper adjective, a word used to describe a noun as of or from the continent of Africa.
yes indeed it is
The plural form of the noun African is Africans.The plural possessive form is Africans'.Example: The Africans' contribution to our music history is unmistakable.
No, the word 'African' is a proper adjectivedescribing the noun elephant.The term 'African elephant' is a complex compound noun, a compound noun made up to two or more parts of speech (adjective+noun = complex compound noun).
The term African American is a compound, proper noun, a word for a specific group of people. The plural noun, intellectuals is a common noun. The proper noun African American is a 'noun used as an adjective' to describe the common noun intellectuals. Using a proper adjective or a proper noun to describe a common noun does not change the common noun into a proper noun; for example McDonald's fries, the noun fries is still a common noun; or for Shakespearean character, the noun character is still a common noun.
No, the word 'African' is a proper adjectivedescribing the noun elephant.The term 'African elephant' is a complex compound noun, a compound noun made up to two or more parts of speech (adjective+noun = complex compound noun).
No, the word 'African' is a proper adjectivedescribing the noun elephant.The term 'African elephant' is a complex compound noun, a compound noun made up to two or more parts of speech (adjective+noun = complex compound noun).
yes indeed it is