The noun Christmas is a proper noun, the name of a holiday.
Yes, the noun 'Christmas' is a proper noun, the name of a specific holiday or holy day.
No, Christmas is a proper noun, the name of a specific holiday.
Christmas is a noun, Merry is an adj describing the noun.
No. Christmas is a proper noun, sometimes used as a noun adjunct or adjective as in Christmas tree and Christmas dinner.
The noun Christmas is a proper, abstract noun (sometimes called an idea noun); a word for a concept.
Christmas is a proper noun. Merry is an adjective.
The word Christmas is not a pronoun, it is a noun, a singular, proper, abstract noun or an adjective. The possessive form is Christmas's. Example uses:Noun: This Christmas we will be visiting my grandmother.Adjective: We will bring her some Christmas gifts.Possessive noun: Christmas's weather was mild this year.
No. Christmas is a proper noun. Its use with other nouns (Christmas dinner, Christmas present, Christmas tree) is as a noun adjunct, not an adjective.
No. Christmas is a proper noun. Its use with other nouns (Christmas dinner, Christmas present, Christmas tree) is as a noun adjunct, not an adjective. The adjective meaning 'of or like Christmas' is Christmasy or Christmassy.
Yes, the word 'Christmas' is a noun, a proper noun; the name of a specific holiday or feast day; a word for a thing.A proper noun is always capitalized.
The word 'Christmas' is a noun, a proper noun; the name of a specific holiday or feast day; the name of a thing.A proper noun is always capitalized.