Yes, Russian can be a proper adjective for things and people from Russia. But it can also be a proper noun (demonym) for a person from Russia (one Russian, two Russians).
Russian IS an adjective.
if you are talking about if it is a common noun or a proper noun, it is a proper noun.
The proper noun Russians is plural; people of or from Russia. The singular form is Russian, which is also the proper adjective.
Samantha is a proper noun when used as a name for a specific person.
Russian is a proper noun therefore it should always be capitalized.
Yes, Leonid Kulik is a noun, a propernoun, the name of a person (noted Russian scientist). A proper noun is always capitalized.
The likely word is a proper noun, the Russian surname Tchaikovsky.Notably, the Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893).
Yes, Russian can be a proper adjective for things and people from Russia. But it can also be a proper noun (demonym) for a person from Russia (one Russian, two Russians).
What is Saki? If it's a name or another proper noun, than Саки.
The proper noun Russians is plural; people of or from Russia. The singular form is Russian, which is also the proper adjective.
The proper noun Russians is plural; people of or from Russia. The singular form is Russian, which is also the proper adjective.
Russian IS an adjective.
Sasha is the same in Italian and Russian. Specifically, the name functions as a Russian loan name in Italian. It is a masculine proper noun. The pronunciation will be "SA-sha" in Italian.
Pencil proper or common noun
Exxon is a proper noun
proper noun