The proper noun is the word Spain, the name of the country. A person of Spain is a Spaniard, also a proper noun. People or things of or from Spain are described by the proper adjective Spanish.
The word Spain is a noun, a proper noun; proper nouns are always capitalized. Spain is the name of a country.
A proper noun, since it is the name of a specific place.
The proper adjective for Spain would be Spanish, as in Spanish cooking.Note that the correct term for nationals of Spain is Spaniard, but many people refer to "the Spanish" in the plural.
Yes, Spanish is a proper noun, a word for the language of Spain or the people of Spain; the name of a specific language or specific people. A proper noun is always capitalized.The word 'Spanish' is also a proper adjective, a word that describes a noun as of or from Spain. A proper adjective is always capitalized.
Spanish is the corresonding adjective to the noun Spain.
Spanish is a proper noun, a word for the language of Spain or the people of Spain; the name of a specific language or specific people. A proper noun is always capitalized.The word 'Spanish' is also a proper adjective, a word that describes a noun as of or from Spain. A proper adjective is always capitalized.
Kentuckian is the proper adjective for Kentucky.
No, the word Spanish is a noun and an adjective.The noun 'Spanish' is a proper noun, a word for the language of Spain or the people of Spain. A proper noun is always capitalized.The adjective 'Spanish' is a proper adjective, a word that describes a noun as of or from Spain. A proper adjective is always capitalized.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: I did well in Spanish in high school. Itwas one of my best subjects. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'Spanish' in the second sentence)
A common adjective describes a general characteristic of a noun, while a proper adjective is derived from a proper noun and specifically identifies a particular noun. For example, "blue" is a common adjective, while "Italian" is a proper adjective derived from the proper noun "Italy."
The Spanish explorers settled in the place we now call Florida.
The proper adjective for Haiti is Haitian.
The proper adjective for southwest is "southwestern."
The proper adjective for Portuguese is "Portuguese."
I don't know about a proper adjetive, but I know how to turn a proper noun into a proper adjective. A proper noun is the proper name of a country, organization, corporation such as Great Britain, America, Spain. Proper adjectives modify nouns as in British flag, American schools, Spanish rice. There, proper nouns (Britain, America, Spain) have been turned into proper adjectives. How about the Universe into universal? Queen Elizabeth from the Elizabethan period? Does this help?Very briefly, when you use a proper noun, for example, Kennedy, to describe another noun, as in Kennedy Administration, grammatically speaking, you are using that proper noun as a proper adjective. It's that simple.