No.
Countryside in French is "campagne".
Countryside is a type of common noun.
The adjectives for countryside are rural, pastoral, scenic, and tranquil.
I love going for walks in the peaceful countryside and enjoying the fresh air and wide open spaces.
The compound word with the word "country" in it is "countryside."
bustling
state
The Latin adjective rustica is a form of the adjective rusticus, -a, -um, which means essentially what "rustic" means in English: "rural; belonging to the countryside". It comes from the Latin word rus (genitive ruris, n.), "country, countryside". Standing by itself as a noun, rustica can mean "a country girl".
No, the word "rural" is actually an adjective. It is used to describe areas or characteristics of countryside or rural communities.
In the sentence, "New England" acts as a proper adjective describing "countryside." The noun "state" also functions as an adjective in "state fair," specifying the type of fair being referenced.
our family enjoyed a sunday dinner of pot roast buttered corn and fudge cake
quietness of the countryside.
The word for countryside in Welsh is "countryside" or "cigled."
My Country, My Countryside, or even My Country Place may be English equivalents of 'Macampagne'. The feminine adjective 'ma' means 'my'. The feminine noun 'campagne' means 'countryside, country place, country, candidacy'. All together, they're pronounced 'mah kahm-pah-nyuh'.
Scotland is mostly countryside
the countryside is farthest place to the right
the side of any country is a countryside