Roman is the proper adjective for Rome.
Venetian is the proper adjective for Venice.
Yes, it is an adjective describing people or things in or from Italy. It can also refer to things associated with Italy's culture. The word Italian is also a demonym (noun) for a person in or from Italy (an Italian), or referring to the language Italian.
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.
Venetian is the proper adjective for Venice.
Yes, it is an adjective describing people or things in or from Italy. It can also refer to things associated with Italy's culture. The word Italian is also a demonym (noun) for a person in or from Italy (an Italian), or referring to the language Italian.
The word 'northern' is an adjective form of the noun north.The word 'north' also functions as an adjective.Examples:The town was established by people from northern Italy. (adjective)There are excellent ski areas in the north of Italy. (noun)The north road out of Milan will take you to Lake Como. (adjective)
The proper adjective for the proper noun Italy is Italian.
TurkishSwedishBritishTibetanMexicanJapaneseItalianEgyptian
Sud Italia is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "south Italy."Specifically, the invariable adjective sud means "south." The feminine noun Italia means "Italy." The pronunciation is "SOO-dee-TAH-lyah."
Jazzistica is a word that describes Italy and that starts with the letter "j." The feminine singular adjective translates as "jazzy" in English. The pronunciation will be "dzad-DZEE-stee-ka" in Italian.
The correct spelling of the proper noun is Tucson, a city in Arizona. The similar word is the proper adjective Tuscan, referring to Tuscany in Italy.
A proper adjective is an adjective derived from a proper noun, for example the adjective Spanish is from the proper noun Spain. A common adjective is not from a proper noun.Some examples of proper adjectives:King Edward VII; Edwardian architecturePeru; Peruvian potterySwitzerland; Swiss cheeseChristianity; Christian ethicsFranz Kafka; a Kafkaesque situationAsia; Asian foodSome examples of common adjectives:modern architecturehand thrown potterycottage cheesenoble ethicsa difficult situationfried food
No, Franz is a proper noun (Frank or Francis are western versions of it). The names of people and places are generally proper nouns. A proper adjective is a word whose root is a proper noun-- like "Italy" is a proper noun, and Italian is a proper adjective: that new Italian restaurant is wonderful.
"South Italy" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Sud Italia.Specifically, the invariable adjective sud means "south, southern." The feminine noun Italia means "Italy." The pronunciation is "SOO-dee-TAH-lyah."
The adjective, Italian, can be either masculine or feminine/ EX: La maison Italienne is feminine but Le village Italien is masculine. If you mean the country of Italy, it is spelled L'Italie and is feminine.