"Romantic" is still an adjective - in phrases like "the Romantic Movement", "Romantic literature" etc., the word "Romantic" describes the movement, literature, what have you. True, it is used somewhat differently from the way the word is used today, but it is still an adjective. The noun is "Romanticism" (as you say, though confusingly, as that statement comes immediately after your statement that the word "Romantic" is not an adjective, but a noun).
Thanks for engaging so thoughtfully with my video! I'm sure anyone who reads this comment will benefit from the info - it certainly prompted me to read even more about the use of abstract nouns etc.
This helped so much! Thank you miss
So glad it was helpful!
Thank you very much for the video,
it is very helpful
Thank you Galileo, I'm really glad it helped :)
"Romantic" is still an adjective - in phrases like "the Romantic Movement", "Romantic literature" etc., the word "Romantic" describes the movement, literature, what have you. True, it is used somewhat differently from the way the word is used today, but it is still an adjective. The noun is "Romanticism" (as you say, though confusingly, as that statement comes immediately after your statement that the word "Romantic" is not an adjective, but a noun).
Thanks for engaging so thoughtfully with my video! I'm sure anyone who reads this comment will benefit from the info - it certainly prompted me to read even more about the use of abstract nouns etc.
This is so good!
Thank you!