No. Neither the word fruit or the name of a fruit can be an adjective.
If the noun fruit or the noun apple were used together with another noun to create a specific term, it would be called a "noun adjunct," not an adjective, as in the terms "fruit salad" or "apple pie."
One adjective for fruit is "fruity" (referring to flavor).
sweetFamily feuds = sweet, juicy, soft, round
A calendar date is a noun, a proper noun (e.g. July 2, August 7th). A date (food) is a fruit, a noun. A date (social interaction) is a type of activity, a noun.
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
no because it is a fruit
No. Fruit is a noun, or adjective/adjunct. It cannot function as a preposition.
Frugivorous is an adjective which means feeding on fruit
As you are using the plural, that means you are talking about the fruit so here it is a plural noun. If you use 'orange' in the singular that could mean the fruit or the colour of the fruit. In the second case it would be an adjective.
· abundant · accessible · available
no what do u thing dummy
The fruit is a noun. The color can be a noun or an adjective.
Globed is an adjective. It describes the noun, fruit. Same as a "red" (adjective) "car" (noun).
No, it is a noun (a fruit). Used with other nouns (grape juice, grape flavor), it is a noun adjunct rather than an adjective.
No, it is a noun. When used as a descriptive word, it is a noun adjunct. An adjective form is "fruity."
There are several, including fruity and fruitful, that are used in specific instances.
Orange can be a noun: I want to eat the orange. Orange can also be an adjective: My calculator is orange.