No, city is a common noun. Used with other nouns (city bus, city streets), it is a noun adjunct.
Cities is not an adjective. It's a plural noun.
Near can actually be an adverb, adjective, or preposition depending on the way in which it is used. For example:Adjective: the near fieldsPreposition: near the cityAdverb: Sunset was drawing near.Interestingly, the first and second uses can be viewed as one, under the heading of "prepositional adjective". A prepositional adjective is an adjective which can take an object. In the second example above, "the city" is the object of near. Why is the near in "near the city" an adjective? Because we can also say, "nearest the city".
Lisbon is the name of a city, a proper noun which should be capitalized. There is no English adjective for a person or thing of or from Lisbon, but the proper adjective in Portuguese is Lisboeta.
It could be an adjective :"The neigbouring areas" or a verb (a gerund): "The suburbia neighbouring the city".
Urb
The word choice is a noun (choice, choices) and an adjective (choice, choicer, choicest). Example sentences: Noun: The choice is yours, New York City or Miami Beach. Adjective: We use only choice cuts of beef for our hamburgers.
Denmark's adjective form is Denmark, because you would say "The city of Denmark." What city? Denmark.
"Urban", from the Latin.
Vienna is a proper noun, the capital city of Austria. The proper adjective is Viennese.(The city name in German is Wien.)
City is a noun. Urban is an adjective which means "about or relating to a city."
The word Melbourne is a proper noun, a city in Australia. The proper adjective is Melburnian.
The correct spelling of the adjective is metropolitan (of the city or city area).
No. Geelong is a proper noun, a city in Australia. The proper adjective may be Geelongian or Geelongite.
GloomyPersistentHarmful
Near can actually be an adverb, adjective, or preposition depending on the way in which it is used. For example:Adjective: the near fieldsPreposition: near the cityAdverb: Sunset was drawing near.Interestingly, the first and second uses can be viewed as one, under the heading of "prepositional adjective". A prepositional adjective is an adjective which can take an object. In the second example above, "the city" is the object of near. Why is the near in "near the city" an adjective? Because we can also say, "nearest the city".
Yes, it is. The adjective can mean at location within a city, or (colloquially) hip and trendy, when applied to music.
No, neither word is an adverb. New is an adjective, describing the noun city.
The adjective "byzantine" comes from the name of the city Byzantium, where the capitol of the eastern empire was located under the name of Constantinople.The adjective "byzantine" comes from the name of the city Byzantium, where the capitol of the eastern empire was located under the name of Constantinople.The adjective "byzantine" comes from the name of the city Byzantium, where the capitol of the eastern empire was located under the name of Constantinople.The adjective "byzantine" comes from the name of the city Byzantium, where the capitol of the eastern empire was located under the name of Constantinople.The adjective "byzantine" comes from the name of the city Byzantium, where the capitol of the eastern empire was located under the name of Constantinople.The adjective "byzantine" comes from the name of the city Byzantium, where the capitol of the eastern empire was located under the name of Constantinople.The adjective "byzantine" comes from the name of the city Byzantium, where the capitol of the eastern empire was located under the name of Constantinople.The adjective "byzantine" comes from the name of the city Byzantium, where the capitol of the eastern empire was located under the name of Constantinople.The adjective "byzantine" comes from the name of the city Byzantium, where the capitol of the eastern empire was located under the name of Constantinople.