.
Adjectives are the third major class of words in English, after nouns and verbs. Adjectives are words expressing properties of objects (e.g. large, blue, simple, clever, economic, progressive, productive, etc)
and, hence, qualifying nouns.
Adjectives in English do not change for number or case. The only grammatical category they have is the degrees of comparison. They are also characterized by functions in the sentence.
Degrees of Comparison.
There are three degrees of comparison: positive, comparative and superlative. The positive form is the plain stem of an adjective (e.g. heavy, slow, straight, etc)
. The comparative states that one thing has more of the quality named by the adjective than some other thing (e.g. Henry is taller than John).
The superlative states that the thing has the greatest degree of the quality among the things being considered (e.g. Henry is the tallest boy in the class)
Most one-syllable adjectives, and most two-syllable adjectives ending in -y, -ow, -er,
or consonant +-le
, with loud stress on the first syllable and weak stress on the second, form their comparative and superlative by the addition of the suffixes -er
and -est.
Positive
|
Comparative
|
Superlative
|
clever
|
cleverer
|
cleverest
|
narrow
|
narrower
|
narrowest
|
pretty
|
prettier
|
prettiest
|
simple
|
simpler
|
simplest
|
Adjectives derived by prefixes from those that use -er/-est
also use these suffixes, even though the addition of prefixes makes them longer that two syllables: unhappy - unhappier -unhappiest
All adjectives other than those enumerated above form their comparative by using the intensifier more
and their superlative by using the intensifier the most.
Positive
|
Comparative
|
Superlative
|
interesting
|
more interesting
|
the most interesting
|
generous
|
more generous
|
the most generous
|
personal
|
more personal
|
the most personal
|
In a very few cases, English permits a choice between the two devices: commoner / more common, commonest / the most common.
Ordinary, when one form is prescribed by the rules, the other is forbidden.
A few adjectives have irregular forms for the degrees of comparison. They are:
good - better - the best
bad - worse - the worst
far - farther - the farthest (for distance)
- further - the furthest (for time and distance)
near - nearer - the nearest (for distance)
- next (for order)
late - later - the latest (for time)
- last (for order)
old - older - the oldest (for age)
- elder - the eldest (for seniority rather the age; used only attributively)
There are some adjectives that, on account of their meaning, do not admit of comparison at all, e.g. perfect, unique, full, empty, square, round, wooden, daily, upper, major, outer, whole, only
and some others.
There are sentence patterns in which comparison is expressed:
a) comparison of equality (as … as)
e.g. The boy was as shy as
a monkey.
After his bathe, the inspector was as fresh as
a fish.
When he had left Paris, it was as cold as
in winter there.
b)
comparison of inequality (not so ... as, not as ... as)
e.g. His skin was not so bronzed as
a Tahiti native’s.
The sun is not so hot
today as
I thought it would be.
You are not as nice as
people think.
c) comparison of superiority (... –er than, ... –est of (in, ever)
e.g. He looked younger than
his years, much younger
than Sheila or me.
To my mind the most interesting
thing in
art is the personality of the artist.
My mother was the proudest of
women, and she was vain, but in the end she had an eye for truth.
It’s the biggest
risk I’ve ever
had to take.
d)
comparison of inferiority ( less ... than)
e.g. John is less musical than
his sister.
He had the consolation of noting that his friend was less sluggish
than before.
e)
comparison of parallel increase or decrease (the ... the, ...-er as)
e.g. The longer
I think of his proposal the less
I like it.
The sooner
this is done, the better
.
He became more cautious
as he grew older.
There are set phrases which contain the comparative or the superlative degree of an adjective:
a) a change for the better (for the worst) –
перемена к лучшему ( к худшему)
e.g. There seem to be a change for the better
in your uncle. He had a very hearty dinner yesterday.
b) none the less
– тем не менее
e.g. It did not take him long to make up his mind. None the less
she showed her scorn for his hesitation.
c) so much the better ( the worst)
– тем лучше (хуже)
e.g. If he will help us, so much the better.
If he doesn’t work, so much the worst
for him.
d) to be the worst for
– делать что-то хуже, еще больше
e.g. He is
rather the worst
for drink.
e) no (none the) worse for
– хуже не станет (не стало) от ...
e.g. You’ll be no worse for
having her to help you.
You are none the worse for
the experience.
f) if the worst comes to the worst
– в худшем случае
e.g. If the worst comes to the worst,
I can always go back home to my parents.
g) to go from bad to worse –
становиться все хуже и хуже
e.g. Thinks went from bad to worse
in the family.
h) as best
- в полную меру старания, как только можно
e.g. He made a living as best
he could.
i) at (the) best -
в лучшем случае
e.g. She cannot get away from her home for long. At (the) best
she can stay with us for two days.
Substantivization of Adjectives.
Sometimes adjectives become substantivized. In this case they have the functions of nouns in the sentence and are always preceded by the definite article. Substantivized adjectives may have two meanings:
1) They may indicate a class of persons in a general sense (e.g. the poor = poor people, the dead = dead people, etc.)
Such adjectives are plural in meaning and take a plural verb.
e.g. The old
receive pensions.
The young
are always romantic, aren’t they?
The blind
are taught trades in special schools.
If we wish to denote a single person we must add a noun.
e.g. The old man
receives a pension.
If we wish to refer to a particular group of persons (not the whole class), it is aslo necessary to add a noun.
e.g. The young
are usually intolerant.
The young men
are fishing.
Some adjectives denoting nationalities (e.g. English, French, Dutch)
are used in the same way.
e.g. The English
are great lovers of tea.
There were a few English people
among the tourists.
2) Substantivized adjectives may also indicate an abstract notion. Then they are singular in meaning and take a singular verb.
e.g. The good
in him overweighs the bad.
My mother never lost her taste for extravagant.
Syntactic Functions of Adjectives.
Adjectives may serve in the sentence as:
1) an attribute
e.g. Do you see the small green
boat, which has such an odd
shape?
The lights of the farm blazed out in the windy
darkness.
Adjectives used as attributes usually immediately precede the noun. Normally there is no pause between the adjective and the noun. Such attributes are called close attributes.
However, an adjective placed in pre-position to the noun may be separated from it by a pause. Then it becomes a loose attribute.
e.g. Clever and tactful
, George listened to my story with deep concern.
Yet loose attributes are more often found in post-position to the noun.
e.g. My father, happy and tired
, kissed me good-night.
2) a predicative
e.g. Her smile was almost professional
.
He looked mature, sober
and calm
.
3) part of a compound verbal predicate
e.g. He stood silent
, with his back turned to the window.
She lay motionless
, as if she were asleep.
4) an objective predicative
e.g. I thought him very intelligent.
She wore her hair short
.
5) a subjective predicative
e.g. The door was closed tight
.
Her hair was dyed blonde
.
It should be noted that most adjectives can be used both attributively and predicatively, but some, among them those beginning with a-,
can be used only as predicatives (e.g. afraid, asleep, along, alive, awake, ashamed
and also content, sorry, well, ill, due, etc.)
A few adjectives can be used only as attributes (e.g. outer, major, minor, only, whole, former, latter
and some others)
Position of Adjectives.
1 Most adjectives can be used in a noun group, after determiners and numbers if there are any, in front of the noun.
e.g. He had a beautiful smile
.
She bought a loaf of white bread
.
There was no clear evidence
.
2
Most adjectives can also be used after a link verb such as ‘be’, ‘become’, or ‘feel’.
e.g. I'm cold.
I felt angry
.
Nobody seemed amused
.
3. Some adjectives are normally used only after a link verb.
afraid alive alone
|
asleep aware content
|
due glad ill
|
ready sorry sure
|
unable well
|
For example, we can say ‘She was glad’, but you do not talk about ‘a glad woman’.
I wanted to be alone
.
We were getting ready
for bed.
I'm
not quite sure
.
He didn't know whether to feel glad
or sorry
.
4. Some adjectives are normally used only in front of a noun.
eastern northern southern western
|
atomic countless digital
|
existing indoor introductory maximum
|
neighbouring occasional outdoor
|
For example, we talk about ‘an atomic bomb’, but we do not say ‘The bomb was atomic’.
He sent countless letters
to the newspapers.
This book includes a good introductory chapter
on forests.
5. When we use an adjective to emphasize a strong feeling or opinion, it always comes in front of a noun.
absolute complete entire
|
outright perfect positive
|
pure real total
|
true utter
|
Some of it was absolute rubbish
.
He made me feel like a complete idiot
.
6. Some adjectives that describe size or age can come after a noun group consisting of a number or determiner and a noun that indicates the unit of measurement.
deep high
|
long old
|
tall thick
|
wide
|
He was about six feet tall
.
The water was several metres deep
.
The baby is nine months old
.
Note that you do not say ‘two pounds heavy’, you say ‘two pounds in weight’.
7. A few adjectives are used alone after a noun.
designate
|
elect
|
galore
|
incarnate
|
She was now the president elect
.
There are empty houses galore
.
8. A few adjectives have a different meaning depending on whether they come in front of or after a noun.
concerned
|
involved
|
present
|
proper
|
responsible
|
For example, ‘the concerned mother’ means a mother who is worried, but ‘the mother concerned’ means the mother who has been mentioned.
It's one of those incredibly involved stories
.
The people involved
are all doctors.
I'm worried about the present situation
.
Of the 18 people present
, I knew only one.
Her parents were trying to act in a responsible manner
.
We do not know the person responsible
for his death.
Order of Adjectives.
1. We often want to add more information to a noun than you can with one adjective, so we need to use two or more adjectives. In theory, we can use the adjectives in any order, depending on the quality you want to emphasize. In practice, however, there is a normal order.
When we use two or more adjectives in front of a noun, we usually put an adjective that expresses our opinion in front of an adjective that just describes something.
e.g. You live in a nice big
house.
He is a naughty little
boy.
She was wearing a beautiful pink
suit.
2. When we use more than one adjective to express our opinion, an adjective with a more general meaning such as ‘good’, ‘bad’, ‘nice’, or ‘lovely’ usually comes before an adjective with a more specific meaning such as ‘comfortable’, ‘clean’, or ‘dirty’.
e.g. I sat in a lovely comfortable
armchair in the corner.
He put on a nice clean
shirt.
It was a horrible dirty
room.
3. We can use adjectives to describe various qualities of people or things. For example, we might want to indicate their size, their shape, or the country they come from.
Descriptive adjectives belong to six main types, but we are unlikely ever to use all six types in the same noun group. If we did, we would normally put them in the following order:
size
|
shape
|
age
|
colour
|
nationality
|
material
|
This means that if we want to use an ‘age’ adjective and a ‘nationality’ adjective, we put the ‘age’ adjective first.
We met some young Chinese
girls.
Similarly, a ‘shape’ adjective normally comes before a ‘colour’ adjective.
e.g. He had round black
eyes.
Other combinations of adjectives follow the same order. Note that ‘material’ means any substance, not only cloth.
e.g. There was a large round wooden
table in the room.
The man was carrying a small black plastic
bag.
4. We usually put comparative and superlative adjectives in front of other adjectives.
e.g. Some of the better English
actors have gone to live in Hollywood.
These are the highest monthly
figures on record.
5. When we use a noun in front of another noun, we never put adjectives between them. We put any adjectives in front of the first noun.
e.g. He works in the French
film industry.
He receives a large weekly
cash payment.
6. When we use two adjectives as the complement of a link verb, we use a conjunction such as ‘and’ to link them. With three or more adjectives, we link the last two with a conjunction, and put commas after the others.
e.g. The day was hot and dusty
.
The room was large but square
.
The house was old, damp and smelly
.
We felt hot, tired and thirsty.
Adjectives with prepositions.
1. When we use an adjective after a link verb, we can often use the adjective on its own or followed by a prepositional phrase.
e.g. He was afraid
.
He was afraid of
his enemies.
2. Some adjectives cannot be used alone after a link verb. If they are followed by a prepositional phrase, it must have a particular preposition:
aware of accustomed to
|
unaware of unaccustomed to
|
fond of used to
|
e.g. I've always been terribly fond of
you.
He is unaccustomed to
the heat.
3. Some adjectives can be used alone, or followed by a particular preposition.
- used alone, or with ‘of ’ to specify the cause of a feeling
afraid ashamed convinced
|
critical envious frightened
|
jealous proud scared
|
suspicious terrified tired
|
They may feel jealous of
your success.
I was terrified of
her.
- used alone, or with ‘of ’ to specify the person who has a quality
brave careless clever generous
|
good intelligent kind nice
|
polite sensible silly stupid
|
thoughtful unkind unreasonable wrong
|
That was clever of
you!
I turned the job down, which was stupid of
me.
- used alone or with ‘to’, usually referring to:
similarity: close equal identical related similar marriage: married engaged loyalty: dedicated devoted loyal rank: junior senior
|
e.g.My problems are very similar to
yours.
He was dedicated to
his job.
- used alone, or followed by 'with' to specify the cause of a feeling
bored content
|
displeased dissatisfied
|
impatient impressed
|
pleased satisfied
|
e.g. I could never be bored with
football.
He was pleased with
her.
- used alone or with ‘at’, usually referring to:
strong reactions: amazed astonished shocked surprised ability: bad excellent good hopeless useless
|
e.g. He was shocked at
the hatred they had shown.
She had always been good at
languages.
- used alone, or with ‘for’ to specify the person or thing that quality relates to
common difficult easy
|
essential important necessary
|
possible unnecessary
|
unusual usual
|
e.g. It's difficult for young people
on their own.
It was unusual for them
to go away at the weekend.
4. Some adjectives can be used alone, or used with different prepositions.
- used alone, with an impersonal subject and ‘of ’ and the subject of the action, or with a personal subject and ‘to’ and the object of the action
cruel friendly generous
|
good kind mean
|
nasty nice polite
|
rude unfriendly unkind
|
e.g. It was rude of
him to leave so suddenly.
She was rude to
him for no reason.
¨ used alone, with ‘about’ to specify a thing or ‘with’ to specify a person
angry annoyed
|
delighted disappointed
|
fed up furious
|
happy upset
|
e.g. She was still angry about
the result.
They're getting pretty fed up with
him.
Adjectives with ‘to’-infinitive or ‘that’-clauses
1.
After link verbs, we often use adjectives that describe how someone feels about an action or situation. With some adjectives, we can add a ‘to’-infinitive clause or a ‘that’-clause to say what the action or situation is.
afraid anxious ashamed
|
disappointed frightened glad
|
happy pleased proud
|
sad surprised unhappy
|
If the subject is the same in both clauses, we usually use a ‘to’-infinitive clause. If the subject is different, we must use a ‘that’-clause.
e.g. I was happy to
see them again.
He was happy that
they were coming to the party.
We often use a ‘to’-infinitive clause when talking about future time in relation to the main clause.
e.g. I am afraid to
go home.
He was anxious to leave
before it got dark.
We often use a ‘that’-clause when talking about present or past time in relation to the main clause.
e.g. He was anxious that
the passport was missing.
They were afraid that
I might have talked to the police.
2. We often use ‘sorry’ with a ‘that’-clause. Note that ‘that’ is often omitted.
e.g. I'm very sorry that
I can't join you.
I'm sorry
I'm so late.
3.
Some adjectives are not usually used alone, but have a ‘to’-infinitive clause after them to say what action or situation the adjective relates to.
able apt bound
|
due inclined liable
|
likely prepared ready
|
unlikely unwilling willing
|
e.g. They were unable to help
her.
They were not likely to forget
it.
I am willing to try
.
I'm prepared to say
I was wrong.
4. When we want to express an opinion about someone or something, we often use an adjective followed by a ‘to’-infinitive clause.
difficult easy impossible possible right wrong
|
e.g. She had been easy to deceive
.
The windows will be almost impossible to open
.
Am I wrong to stay
here?
5. With some adjectives, we use a ‘that’-clause to express an opinion about someone or something.
awful bad essential
|
extraordinary funny good
|
important interesting obvious
|
sad true
|
e.g. I was sad that
people had reacted in this way.
. It is extraordinary that
we should ever have met!
6. We can also use adjectives with ‘to’-infinitive clauses after ‘it’ as the impersonal subject. We use the preposition ‘of ’ or ‘for’ to indicate the person or thing that the adjective relates to.
e.g. It was easy to find
the path.
It was good of John to help
me.
It was difficult for her to find
a job.
Adjectives ending in ‘-ing’ or ‘-ed’
1.
We use many ‘-ing’ adjectives to describe the effect that something has on our feelings, or on the feelings of people in general. For example, if we talk about 'a surprising number', we mean that the number surprises us.
alarming amazing annoying astonishing boring
|
charming confusing convincing depressing disappointing
|
embarrassing exciting frightening interesting shocking
|
surprising terrifying tiring welcoming worrying
|
e.g. He lives in a charming
house just outside the town.
She always has a warm welcoming
smile.
2.
We use some ‘-ing’ adjectives to describe something that continues over a period of time.
ageing booming
|
decreasing dying
|
existing increasing
|
living remaining
|
e.g. Britain is an ageing
society.
Increasing
prices are making food very expensive.
3.
Many ‘-ed’ adjectives describe people's feelings. They have the same form as the past participle of a transitive verb and have a passive meaning. For example, ‘a frightened person’ is a person who has been frightened by something.
alarmed amused astonished bored
|
delighted depressed disappointed excited
|
frightened interested satisfied shocked
|
surprised tired troubled worried
|
e.g. She looks alarmed
about something.
A bored
student complained to his teacher.
She had big blue frightened
eyes.
Note that the past participles of irregular verbs do not end in ‘-ed’, but can be used as adjectives.
e.g. The bird had a broken
wing.
His coat was dirty and torn
.
4. Like other adjectives, ‘-ing’ and ‘-ed’ adjectives can be:
They still show amazing
loyalty to their parents.
This is the most terrifying
tale ever written.
I was thanked by the satisfied
customer.
The worried
authorities cancelled the match.
It's amazing
what they can do.
The present situation is terrifying.
He felt satisfied
with all the work he had done.
My husband was worried
.
- modified by adverbials such as ‘quite‘, ‘really‘, and ‘very’
The film was quite boring
.
There is nothing very surprising
in this.
She was quite astonished
at his behaviour.
He was a very disappointed
young man.
- used in the comparative and superlative
His argument was more convincing
than mine.
He became even more depressed
after she died.
This is one of the most boring books
I've ever read.
She was the most interested
in going to the cinema.
5.
A small number of ‘-ed‘ adjectives are normally only used after link verbs such as ‘be‘, ‘become‘, or ‘feel‘. They are related to transitive verbs, and are often followed by a prepositional phrase, a ‘to‘-infinitive clause, or a ‘that‘-clause.
convinced delighted finished
|
interested involved pleased
|
prepared scared thrilled
|
tired touched worried
|
e.g. The Brazilians are pleased
with the results.
He was always prepared
to account for his actions.
She was scared
that they would find her.
|