No, it is a proper noun. It is the name of a country in southeastern Europe, on the Mediterranean Sea and the Aegean Sea.
no it is not.
it means you are.Its a verb.
The nouns in the sentence are:visitor; a word for a person; subject of the sentence;Greece; a word for a place; object of the preposition 'from';customs; a word for things; direct object of the verb 'described'.
A predicative noun is a noun that follows a linking verb and renames the subject. A predicative adjective, on the other hand, is an adjective that follows a linking verb and describes the subject.
There is no such place as "ancient Greece" currently, so the question is a non-sequitur. (Or perhaps just a verb-tense error.) If you are coming to the internet to find the easy way to answer a school-assignment question it is evident that you shouldn't use educational shortcuts, my friend.
Greece rome
There is no opposite of Crete (Mediterranean island between Greece and Libya), although an opposing civilization of the Minoans was that of the Mycenaeans.(*The opposite of the verb create would be to destroy, cancel, remove, or undo.)
The homophone of "grease" is "grease." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, and in this case, "grease" only has one spelling as both the verb and the noun.
Greece
Both are Greece
greek is the greece's nationality.
Greece is a country. There really are no 'opposites' to countries. I suppose the opposite of Greece would be "not Greece."