No it's a noun.
The noun "calendar" is a common noun. Common nouns are general, non-specific names for people, places, things, or ideas. In this case, "calendar" refers to a system of organizing days for social, religious, commercial, or administrative purposes. It does not refer to a specific calendar but rather to the concept of a calendar in general.
The Gregorian Calendar is solar and the Hebrew Calendar is lunisolar.
A perpetual calendar is the type of calendar that can be adjusted for any year. This type of calendar can be reused each year.
There was an old Germanic calendar, but it was different to the Roman calendar, which is now used. The Germanic calendar no longer is used.
the idiot calendar
Yes, the word 'calendar' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'calendar' is a word for a chart or set of pages showing the days, weeks, and months; a listing of things to be presented or considered; a word for a thing.Examples:I have my appointment calendar on my phone. (noun)My secretary can calendar those appointments for you. (verb)
No, it is a proper noun. It is a Jewish religious holiday (calendar date varies).
No, "Thursday" is a noun referring to a day of the week. It is the fifth day in the Western calendar and is named after Thor, the Norse god of thunder.
The noun "calendar" is a common noun. Common nouns are general, non-specific names for people, places, things, or ideas. In this case, "calendar" refers to a system of organizing days for social, religious, commercial, or administrative purposes. It does not refer to a specific calendar but rather to the concept of a calendar in general.
The word 'calendar' is a noun, a word for a chart or series of pages showing the days, weeks, and months of a year; a word for a schedule of coming events; a word for a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'calendar' is it.Example: My calendar is on the desk. It will show my scheduled appointments. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'calendar' in the second sentence)Note: The word 'calendar' is also a verb: calendar, calendars, calendaring, calendared.
the Gregorian calendar
No, the 2012 calendar has its dates on the same days of the week at the 1984 calendar and the 2040 calendar. The 2000 calendar is likewise the same as the 1972 calendar and the 2028 calendar.
the Roman calendar
Lunar calendar
The Gregorian Calendar is solar and the Hebrew Calendar is lunisolar.
calendar
'Calendar' in Spanish is 'calendario'.