no, It is considered as Noun.
It appears that in 2007, dictionaries dropped the hypen in ice cream when used as a noun, but kept it for the adjective such as "ice-cream cone." See the related article in the links below.
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Nouns are not describing words, adjectives describe noun. The word vanilla is a noun or an adjective.You can use the adjective 'vanilla' to describe a noun:vanilla ice creamvanilla hand creamOr, you can use adjectives to describe the noun 'vanilla':pure vanillaFrench vanilla
have an ice-cream then go home
If you mean "like" as in, "I like ice cream," then the adjective form would be "liked." As in "He is a well liked man."
Licking. And remember, a verb is an ACTION WORD, so whoever put creamy, is stupid because creamy is an adjective..
ice cream ice cream ice cream ice cream ice cream ice cream
The elephant ate the ice cream off the cage floor at the zoo.
The word cherry is a noun that can be used as an adjective. I had an ice cream sundae with a cherry on top. Cherry pie is his favorite.
He eats ice cream - Does he eat ice cream? He ate the ice cream - Did he eat the ice cream? He is eating the ice cream - Is he eating the ice cream? He was eating ice cream - Was he eating ice cream? They have eaten the ice cream - Have they eaten the ice cream? He has eaten the ice cream - Has he eaten the ice cream? He had eaten the ice cream - Had he eaten the ice cream? He had been eating ice cream - Had he been eating ice cream? He will eat ice cream to morrow - Will he eat ice ream tomorrow? He is going to eat ice cream tomorrow - Is he going to eat ice cream tomorrow?
ice cream ice cream we all scream ofr ice cream