It depends on how it is used. It can be either a noun or an adjective.
suffix-capital s
The word German can be a proper noun or a proper adjective. The noun refers to someone in or from Germany (a German), or the language spoken there. *as a genealogy term, it does not use a capital G
The word 'Lucky' (capital L) is a noun, a proper noun; a common name for a pet or the nickname of a person.The word 'lucky' (lower case l) is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a lucky penny, a luckybreak, a lucky guess, etc.)
The word 'venture' is both a verb and a noun. Examples:Verb: My mom won't venture out at night.Noun: The venture did not look like a good investment.For terms like 'venture capital', the noun venture is forming a compound noun with capital, not as an adjective.
The word 'pacific' (lower case p) is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as conducive to peace, not aggressive (a pacific nation, pacific people, etc.). The word 'Pacific' (capital P) is a proper noun , the name of a specific ocean, the "Pacific Ocean". The word 'Pacific' (capital P) is also a proper adjective, a word that describes a noun as of or related to the Pacific Ocean (Pacific islands, Pacific fleet, etc.).
The word "capital" can function as both a noun and an adjective.
"Capital" is primarily a noun, but it is also used as a so-called "substantive adjective", as in "capital punishment."
As a noun: The capital of New York State is Albany.As an adjective: In many states, murder is still a capital offense.
When it describes a noun. "Block" letters are plain capital letters.
Capital can function as a noun, verb, or adjective. As a noun, it refers to wealth, resources, or the capital city of a country. As a verb, it can mean to provide funding or to write in capital letters. As an adjective, it describes something related to a capital city or money.
Yes, the word 'cellular' is an adjective, which describes a noun as of, relating to, or consisting of cells. Note: the adjective 'cellular' is not a proper adjective; only use a capital 'c' when it is the first word in a sentence.
I ,because, also ,a, she, so, he, then, next and after that
suffix-capital s
The word German can be a proper noun or a proper adjective. The noun refers to someone in or from Germany (a German), or the language spoken there. *as a genealogy term, it does not use a capital G
The word 'capital' is a noun, a word for wealth in the form of money or other assets owned by a person or organization, a word for a thing; the city where a country or region has its government; the most important place for an activity or an industry; a word for a place.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'capital' is it.Examples:Your capital is limited. You should invest it wisely.This is the fashion capital of Europe. It is where fashion students dream of working.
The word 'Lucky' (capital L) is a noun, a proper noun; a common name for a pet or the nickname of a person.The word 'lucky' (lower case l) is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a lucky penny, a luckybreak, a lucky guess, etc.)
The word 'venture' is both a verb and a noun. Examples:Verb: My mom won't venture out at night.Noun: The venture did not look like a good investment.For terms like 'venture capital', the noun venture is forming a compound noun with capital, not as an adjective.