English Adjectives
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English adjectives form a large open
category Category, plural categories, may refer to: Philosophy and general uses * Categorization, categories in cognitive science, information science and generally *Category of being * ''Categories'' (Aristotle) *Category (Kant) *Categories (Peirce) * ...
of
word A word is a basic element of language that carries an semantics, objective or pragmatics, practical semantics, meaning, can be used on its own, and is uninterruptible. Despite the fact that language speakers often have an intuitive grasp of w ...
s in
English English usually refers to: * English language * English people English may also refer to: Peoples, culture, and language * ''English'', an adjective for something of, from, or related to England ** English national ide ...
which,
semantically Semantics (from grc, σημαντικός ''sēmantikós'', "significant") is the study of reference, meaning, or truth. The term can be used to refer to subfields of several distinct disciplines, including philosophy, linguistics and comput ...
, tend to denote properties such as size, colour, mood, quality, age, etc. with such members as ''other'', ''big'', ''new'', ''good'', ''different'', ''Cuban'', ''sure'', ''important'', and ''right''. Adjectives
head A head is the part of an organism which usually includes the ears, brain, forehead, cheeks, chin, eyes, nose, and mouth, each of which aid in various sensory functions such as sight, hearing, smell, and taste. Some very simple animals may ...
adjective phrase An adjective phrase (or adjectival phrase) is a phrase whose head is an adjective. Almost any grammar or syntax textbook or dictionary of linguistics terminology defines the adjective phrase in a similar way, e.g. Kesner Bland (1996:499), Crystal ( ...
s, and the most typical members function as
modifiers In linguistics, a modifier is an optional element in phrase structure or clause structure which ''modifies'' the meaning of another element in the structure. For instance, the adjective "red" acts as a modifier in the noun phrase "red ball", provi ...
in
noun phrases In linguistics, a noun phrase, or nominal (phrase), is a phrase that has a noun or pronoun as its head or performs the same grammatical function as a noun. Noun phrases are very common cross-linguistically, and they may be the most frequently occ ...
. Most adjectives either inflect for
grade Grade most commonly refers to: * Grade (education), a measurement of a student's performance * Grade, the number of the year a student has reached in a given educational stage * Grade (slope), the steepness of a slope Grade or grading may also ref ...
(e.g., ''big'', ''bigger'', ''biggest'') or combine with ''more'' and ''most'' to form comparatives (e.g., ''more interesting'') and superlatives (e.g., ''most interesting''). Huddleston, Rodney, Geoffrey K. Pullum, and Brett Reynolds. ''A Student's Introduction to English Grammar''. 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, 2022. p.157. They are characteristically modifiable by ''very'' (e.g., ''very small''). A large number of the most typical members combine with the
suffix In linguistics, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns, adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Suffixes can carry ...
''-ly'' to form adverbs (e.g., ''final'' + ''ly'': ''finally''). Most adjectives function as complements in
verb phrase In linguistics, a verb phrase (VP) is a syntactic unit composed of a verb and its arguments except the subject of an independent clause or coordinate clause. Thus, in the sentence ''A fat man quickly put the money into the box'', the words ''quic ...
s (e.g., ''It looks good''), and some license complements of their own (e.g., ''happy'' ''that you're here'').


The syntax of adjectives and adjective phrases


Internal structure

An adjective phrase (AdjP) is headed by an adjective and optionally takes dependents. AdjPs can take modifiers, which are usually pre-head adverb phrases (e.g., ''truly wonderful'') or post-head preposition phrases (e.g., ''too big for you''; ''afraid of the dark''). The following tree diagram in the style of ''The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language'' shows the AdjP ''very happy to try'', with the adverb ''very'' as a modifier and the clause ''to try'' as a complement.


Complements of adjectives

English adjectives can take clauses, preposition phrases, and noun phrases as complements. Clause complements in adjective phrases can be either finite or nonfinite. Finite clause complements can be declarative (e.g., ''very pleased that I had bought his book'') or interrogative (e.g., ''not sure whether I want to keep reading''). Nonfinite clause complements can occur with a subject (e.g., ''happy for you to prove me wrong'') or without a subject (e.g., ''eager to please''). Adjectives that take preposition phrase complements license preposition phrases headed by fixed prepositions. For example, ''dependent'' takes preposition phrase complements headed only by ''on'' or ''upon''. In some cases, a complement is obligatory; ''I'm loath to admit it'' is fine, but ''*I'm loath'' is incomplete. A small number of adjectives (''due'', ''like'', ''near'', ''unlike'', and ''worth'') can take noun phrases as complements. For example, ''worth'' can function as the head of an adjective phrase with a noun phrase complement (e.g., ''worth'' ''a second chance'').


Modifiers of adjectives

The prototypical pre-head modifiers of English adjectives are adverb phrases headed by degree adverbs, such as ''very'' and ''too''.Aarts, Bas. ''Oxford Modern English Grammar''. Oxford University Press, 2011. pp. 136–138. For example, the adjective ''tall'' can be modified by the adverb phrase ''very''. Less common pre-head modifiers in adjective phrases are noun phrases (e.g., ''six feet long''), preposition phrases (e.g., ''by no means realistic''), and determiner phrases (e.g., ''that small''). Preposition phrases function as post-head modifiers in English adjective phrases. In the adjective phrase ''foolish in the extreme'', for example, the preposition phrase ''in the extreme'' functions as a modifier. Less commonly, certain adverbs (''indeed'' and ''still'') and one determiner (''enough'') can head phrases that function as post-head modifiers in adjective phrases (e.g., ''very harmful indeed'', ''sweeter still'', and ''fair enough'').


Functions

While adjectives themselves function only as heads in adjective phrases (an AdjP is often a head adjective with no dependents), adjective phrases function at the clause level as predicative complements and predicative adjuncts. At the phrase level, adjective phrases function as modifiers and predeterminatives in noun phrases and complements in some preposition phrases (e.g., ''they didn't look as good'').


Predicative complements

At the clause level, adjective phrases commonly appear as predicative complements.Aarts, Bas. ''Oxford Modern English Grammar''. Oxford University Press, 2011. pp. 97–100. A predicative complement is a constituent that ascribes a property to a
predicand In semantics, a predicand is an argument in an utterance, specifically that of which something is predicated. By extension, in syntax, it is the constituent in a clause typically functioning as the subject. Examples In the most typical cases, ...
. For example, ''The dinner was lovely'' ascribes the property of being lovely to ''the dinner'', the syntactic subject and semantic predicand. Predicative complements may be subject-related, as in the previous example, or object-related, the latter being licensed by complex transitive verbs such as ''feel'' and ''make'', as in ''That made her hungry'', where the property of being hungry is ascribed to the syntactic object and semantic predicand, ''her''.


Predicative adjuncts

Adjective phrases also function as predicative adjuncts in clause structure. Such adjective phrases can be integrated into the clause (e.g., ''Love dies young'') or detached from the clause as a supplement (e.g., ''Happy to see her, I wept''). Adjective phrases functioning as predicative adjuncts are typically interpreted with the subject of the main clause being the predicand of the adjunct (i.e., "I was happy to see her"). When this is not the case, such supplements are often deprecated as
dangling modifier A dangling modifier (also known as a dangling participle or illogical participle) is a type of ambiguous grammatical construct whereby a grammatical modifier could be misinterpreted as being associated with a word other than the one intended. A dan ...
s.


Modifiers within noun phrases

Adjective phrases often function as pre-head (or attributive) modifiers in noun phrases, occurring after any determinative in the noun phrase (NP) (e.g., ''some nice folks''). In some cases they are post-head (or postpositive) modifiers, with particular adjectives like ''galore'' (e.g., ''stories galore'') or with certain
compound Compound may refer to: Architecture and built environments * Compound (enclosure), a cluster of buildings having a shared purpose, usually inside a fence or wall ** Compound (fortification), a version of the above fortified with defensive struc ...
heads like ''somebody'' (e.g., ''somebody special'').Huddleston, Rodney, and Geoffrey K. Pullum. ''The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language''. Cambridge University Press, 2002. pp. 550–553.


Predeterminatives within noun phrases

Adjective phrases can function as predeterminatives under certain conditions. Specifically, they can do so only in noun phrases with ''a'' (or ''an'') functioning as the determinative and only if the adjective phrase either has ''such'' or exclamative ''what'' as its head or begins with one of a small number of modifiers (i.e., ''as'', ''how'', ''so'', ''this'', ''that'', or ''too''). In the noun phrase ''such a difficult little devil'', for example, the adjective phrase ''such'' functions as predeterminative. Similarly, in the clause ''how important a part is it?'', the adjective phrase ''how important'' functions as predeterminative.


Complements within preposition phrases

Adjective phrases can function as complements of preposition phrases. In the clause ''the film characterized him as childish'', for example, the adjective phrase ''childish'' functions as the complement of the preposition ''as''.


Cases such as ''the poor'' and ''the French''

In cases such as ''the very poor'' and ''the French'' which denote a class, traditional grammars see the adjective as being "used as a noun". However, ''poor'' cannot actually be a noun here for three reasons: ''very'' doesn't modify nouns, there is no possibility to pluralize ''poor'' (e.g., *''three poors''), and most determinatives are impossible (e.g., *''a poor could not'' or *''some poor did''). Other grammars see this as a case of
ellipsis The ellipsis (, also known informally as dot dot dot) is a series of dots that indicates an intentional omission of a word, sentence, or whole section from a text without altering its original meaning. The plural is ellipses. The term origin ...
, where the head noun is simply left out and the AdjP is a regular modifier. In this view, the elided noun is something like ''one'', and ''the very poor'' is an elided form of ''the very poor ones''. Other accounts, such as one advanced by Bas Aarts, do not assume ellipsis but instead argue that phrases like these are best analyzed as noun phrases with an empty element functioning as the head, yielding an analysis like this: sub>NP_the_[AP_veryAdv_poorAdjN.html" ;"title="sub>AP veryAdv poorAdj">sub>NP the [AP veryAdv poorAdjN">sub>AP veryAdv poorAdj">sub>NP the [AP veryAdv poorAdjNAarts, Bas. ''Syntactic Gradience: The Nature of Grammatical Indeterminacy.'' Oxford University Press, 2007. pp. 129–136. ''
The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language ''The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language'' (''CGEL'') is a descriptive grammar of the English language. Its primary authors are Rodney Huddleston and Geoffrey K. Pullum. Huddleston was the only author to work on every chapter. It was publ ...
'' takes such instances to be fused modifier-heads. Under this analysis, adjective phrases may bear two functions at one time, fusing the functions of modifier and head in an NP where no head noun exists. In the noun phrase ''the very poor'', the adjective ''poor'' is the fused modifier-head as shown in the tree diagram below.


Types of adjectives


Non-attributive and non-predicative adjectives

While most adjectives can function as both attributive modifier (e.g., ''a new job'') and predicative complement (e.g., ''the job was new''), some are limited to one or the other of these two functions.Garner, Bryan A. ''The Chicago Guide to English Grammar, Usage, and Punctuation''. University of Chicago Press, 2016. pp. 58–60. For example, the adjective ''drunken'' cannot be used predicatively (''a drunken fool'' vs ''*the fool was drunken''), while the adjective ''awake'' has the opposite limitation (''*an awake child'' vs ''the child is awake''). It is not only certain adjectives, but also certain constructions that are limited to one function or the other. For instance ''a nice hot bath'' is possible, as are ''the bath is hot'' and ''the bath is nice'', but ''*the bath is nice hot'' is not. Linguist and historian Peter Matthews observes "that the attributive and predicative uses of adjectives have diverged" and continue to do so. For example, the sense of ''big'' in ''Well, that's big of you'' from the early 20th century is only possible as a predicative complement.


Gradable and non gradable adjectives

Most adjectives are
gradable Grade most commonly refers to: * Grade (education), a measurement of a student's performance * Grade, the number of the year a student has reached in a given educational stage * Grade (slope), the steepness of a slope Grade or grading may also r ...
, but some are not (e.g., ''ancillary'', ''bovine'', ''municipal'', ''pubic'', ''first'', etc.), or at least have particular senses in which they are not. For example ''a very Canadian embassy'' can imply that the embassy has the stereotypically Canadian characteristics (politeness perhaps), but it cannot mean that the embassy represents Canada in the way that ''a Canadian embassy'' does.


Other types claimed in traditional grammars

Many words that have been categorized by
traditional grammar Traditional grammar (also known as classical grammar) is a framework for the description of the structure of a language. The roots of traditional grammar are in the work of classical Greek language, Greek and Latin language, Latin Philology, phil ...
s as types of adjectives are categorized as belonging to entirely different lexical categories by modern grammars, such as ''
The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language ''The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language'' (''CGEL'') is a descriptive grammar of the English language. Its primary authors are Rodney Huddleston and Geoffrey K. Pullum. Huddleston was the only author to work on every chapter. It was publ ...
''. The types below are mostly of this kind. What these words have in common is, to put it in traditional terms, that they "qualify" nouns. In modern terms, they appear as pre-head dependents in noun phrases. Note that a word may be traditionally assigned to multiple types: for example ''whose'' is variously called a possessive adjective, an interrogative adjective, a pronominal adjective, and a relative adjective.


Quantitative adjectives

Words like ''many'' and ''few,'' along with numbers (e.g., ''many good people'', ''two times'') are traditionally categorized as adjectives, where modern grammars see them as
determiners A determiner, also called determinative (abbreviated ), is a word, phrase, or affix that occurs together with a noun or noun phrase and generally serves to express the reference of that noun or noun phrase in the context. That is, a determiner m ...
. This term has also be used for ordinals like ''first, tenth,'' and ''hundredth'', which are undisputed adjectives.


Demonstrative adjectives

This type includes ''this'', ''that'', ''these'', and ''those'', which are seen by most modern grammars as determiners. It also includes the undisputed adjective ''such.''


Possessive adjectives

This type includes ''my'', ''your'', ''our'', ''their'', etc. (e.g., ''my friend''). These are categorized by most modern grammars as
pronouns In linguistics and grammar, a pronoun (list of glossing abbreviations, abbreviated ) is a word or a group of words that one may substitute for a noun or noun phrase. Pronouns have traditionally been regarded as one of the part of speech, parts o ...
or determiners.


Interrogative adjectives

This type includes ''what'', ''which'' and ''whose'' (e.g., ''what time''). These are categorized by most modern grammars as pronouns or determiners. (''What'' in exclamatives, e.g., ''what a lovely day!'' is an adjective, but is not interrogative.) ''How'' in questions like ''How are you?'' is sometimes categorized as an interrogative adjective.


Distributive adjectives

This type includes words like ''any'', ''each'', and ''neither'' (e.g., ''any time''). These are categorized by most modern grammars as determiners.


Indefinite adjectives

This type includes words like ''all'', ''another'', ''any'', ''both'', and ''each'' (e.g., ''another day''). These are categorized by most modern grammars as determiners.


Pronominal adjectives

This type includes words that "qualify" a noun and must agree with it in number: ''all'', ''these'', ''some'', ''no'', etc.(e.g., ''these days''). These are categorized by other grammars as determiners or pronouns.


Proper adjectives

This type includes words that are derived (or thought to be derived) from common nouns and are capitalized (e.g., ''an Italian vacation'', ''a New York minute''). Some of these are categorized by modern grammars as adjectives (e.g., ''Italian'', ''Christian'', ''Dubliner'', ''Chinese'', ''Thatcherite'', etc.) and some as nouns (e.g., ''the Reagan administration'', ''the Tokyo train system'').


Compound adjectives

This type includes adjectives, or what were/are thought to be adjectives, composed of two or more words operating "as a single adjective" (e.g., ''straightlaced'', ''New York'' (see above), ''long-term'', etc.).


Relative adjectives

This type includes ''which'' and ''whose'' (e.g., ''the person whose book I bought'') appearing in relative constructions. These are categorized by most modern grammars as pronouns or determiners.


Morphology


Inflectional morphology

Many adjectives
inflect In linguistic morphology, inflection (or inflexion) is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical categories such as tense, case, voice, aspect, person, number, gender, mood, animacy, and def ...
for degree of
comparison Comparison or comparing is the act of evaluating two or more things by determining the relevant, comparable characteristics of each thing, and then determining which characteristics of each are similar to the other, which are different, and t ...
. For example, ''hot'' has the comparative form ''hotter'' and the superlative form ''hottest''. Typically, short adjectives (including most single-
syllable A syllable is a unit of organization for a sequence of speech sounds typically made up of a syllable nucleus (most often a vowel) with optional initial and final margins (typically, consonants). Syllables are often considered the phonological "bu ...
adjectives that are semantically gradable), adjectives originating in Old English, and short adjectives borrowed from French use the ''-er'' and ''-est'' suffixes. Adjectives with two syllables vary in whether they can mark degree of comparison through inflectional suffixes or must do so periphrastically with ''more'' and ''most''. Some take either form (e.g., ''commoner'', ''more common'') while others take only one or the other (e.g., ''happier'' but usually not ''more happy''). Longer adjectives derived from Greek or Latin and most adjectives of three or more syllables typically mark degree of comparison with ''more'' and ''most'' (e.g., ''more expensive'' but not ''expensiver'').


Derivational morphology


Category maintaining

It is possible to form adjectives from other adjectives through the addition of prefixes (e.g., ''happy →'' ''unhappy''; ''typical → atypical''), and suffixes (e.g., ''young →'' ''youngish''; ''botanic → botanical'').


Category changing


= Adjective forming

= Adjectives may be formed by the addition of affixes to a base from another category of words. For example, the noun ''recreation'' combines with the suffix ''-al'' to form the adjective ''recreational''. * Prefixes of this type include ''a-'' + noun (''blaze → ablaze'') and ''non-'' + noun (''stop → non-stop''). * Suffixes of this type include verb + ''-able'' (''accept →'' ''acceptable''), noun + ''-al'' (''nation →'' ''national''), noun + ''-esque'' (''picture →'' ''picturesque''), noun or verb + ''-less'' (''home →'' ''homeless''; ''tire → tireless''), noun + ''-ate'' (''passion →'' ''passionate''), noun + ''-en'' (''gold →'' ''golden''), verb + ''-ive'' (''act →'' ''active''), and many others. Bauer, Laurie. ''English Word-Formation.'' Cambridge University Press, 1983. p. 224.


= With an adjective as the lexical base

= Through a process of derivational morphology, adjectives may form words of other categories. For example, the adjective ''happy'' combines with the suffix ''-ness'' to form the noun ''happiness''. * It is typical of English adjectives to combine with the ''-ly'' suffix to become adverbs (e.g., ''real → really''; ''encouraging → encouragingly''). * Noun-forming suffixes include ''-cy'' (''private → privacy''), ''-ness'' (''happy → happiness''), ''-dom'' (''wise'' ''→ wisdom''), ''-hood'' (''likely → likelihood''), ''-ist'' (''special → specialist''), and ''-th'' (''true → truth''). * Verb-forming affixes include ''-ify'' and ''-ize'' (e.g., ''real → realize''; ''just → justify''). * Adjectives also form words through conversion, without any change in form (e.g., ''red'' (adj) ''→ red'' (noun)).


Compounding

An adjective base can join with a base from another category to form a new word as in ''blackboard'', ''noteworthy'', ''childproof'', ''fail-safe'', ''uptight'', etc.


Adjectives vs other lexical categories


Adjectives vs nouns

Typically, adjectives and nouns in English can be distinguished by their morphological and syntactic features. Prototypical adjectives can inflect for degree of comparison (e.g., ''happy'' and ''happier'') but cannot inflect for number (e.g., ''happy'' but not ''happys''). Conversely, prototypical nouns can inflect for number (e.g., ''mother'' and ''mothers'') but not for degree of comparison (e.g., ''mother'' but not ''motherer'' or ''motherest''). English adjectives head phrases that typically function as pre-head modifiers of nouns or predicative complements (e.g., ''those nice folks seem quite capable'') while English nouns head phrases that can function as subjects, or objects in verb phrases or preposition phrases (e.g., 'Jess''''told'' 'my sister'' 'a story''''about'' 'cute'' ''animals''. Noun phrases also function, like adjective phrases, as predicative complements, though in a more limited range of contexts; for example, both ''be'' and ''feel'' allow the adjective phrase ''difficult'' as a predicative complement, but only ''be'' also allows the noun phrase ''a difficulty''. The prototypical pre-head modifiers of adjectives are adverb phrases (e.g., ''quite capable'') while the prototypical pre-head modifiers of nouns are adjective phrases (e.g., ''those nice folks''). Finally, English adjectives, unlike English nouns, cannot function as the heads of phrases containing determinatives or predeterminatives. The following table summarizes these characteristics: The distinction between adjective and noun in English is not as clear in certain cases, such as with colour terms and noun-like words occurring in attributive position. In the case of colour terms, the category can often be identified without controversy. For instance, colour terms used as subjects (e.g., ''orange'' ''is the colour of my love'') or predicative complements (e.g., ''my favourite colour is orange'') are typical nouns while colour terms occurring attributively (e.g., ''the orange flower'') are typical adjectives. Similarly, colour terms marked as plural (e.g., ''the reds in the painting'') are nouns while those marked as comparative (e.g., ''redder'') or superlative (e.g., ''reddest'') are adjectives. However, the categorization of colour terms is less clear in cases like ''The foliage emerged, becoming deep green as the summer unfolds''. Here, the modifier of the colour term is an adjective (''deep'') rather than an adverb (''deeply''), which suggests that ''green'' is a noun. But the phrase occurs as the predicative complement of ''become'' and could, in principle, be modified by a adverb like ''very'' or appear in comparative form, which are typical characteristics of adjectives. Bas Aarts notes that this apparent dual categorization can be avoided by treating terms like ''deep orange'' as adjective-adjective compounds. Almost any noun may appear in attributive position (e.g., ''a geography student''), but in doing so they have traditionally said to be "functioning as an adjective". Such words are like adjectives in that they function as pre-head modifiers of nouns and resist pluralization in this position (*''a geographies student''). However, they are more like nouns in that they can be modified by adjective phrases, not adverb phrases (e.g., ''a cultural geography student'', not *''a culturally geography student''), are not gradable, and cannot occur alone as predicative complements (*''the student seems geography''). Despite sharing features of both adjectives and nouns, modern dictionaries and grammars typically assign these words to the category of noun, though some describe them as a subset of noun called "adjectival nouns."


Adjectives vs verbs

Many adjectives derive from present
participle In linguistics, a participle () (from Latin ' a "sharing, partaking") is a nonfinite verb form that has some of the characteristics and functions of both verbs and adjectives. More narrowly, ''participle'' has been defined as "a word derived from ...
s (e.g., ''interesting, willing'', & ''amazing'') or past participles (e.g., ''tired'', ''involved'', & ''concerned''). These can often be distinguished from verbs by their ability to be modified by ''very'' (e.g., ''very tired'' but not *''very based on it'') or appear after ''become'' as predicative complements. Adjectives almost never take objects, so a case like ''They were entertaining guests'' must be a verb.


Adjectives vs prepositions

Most prepositions are not gradable, so this can often distinguish them from adjectives, which typically are. As a result, adjectives can typically be modified by adverbs ''very'', ''so,'' and ''too'', while prepositions typically cannot. Conversely, prepositions can typically be modified by ''right'' (e.g., ''right up the tree''), while adjectives cannot. Finally, preposition phrases readily function as non-predicative adjuncts in clause structure (e.g., ''after dinner, there was dancing'') while AdjPs are typically ungrammatical without a predicand (e.g., *''Enjoyable, there was dancing'').


Semantics

Apart from the general semantic properties of adjectives (denoting properties such as size, colour, mood, quality, age, etc.), English adjectives have various semantic properties that are not as general.


Quantification and number

An adjective can express quantification over the events described by the verb. For example, the adjective ''occasional'' in ''She also has an occasional drink'' (i.e., “She drinks occasionally.”) quantifies over her drinking rather than describing the drink. Although English adjectives do not participate in the system of number the way determiners, nouns, and pronouns do, English adjectives may still express number semantically. For example, adjectives like ''several'', ''various'', and ''multiple'' are semantically plural, while those like ''single'', ''lone'', and ''unitary'' have singular semantics.


Definiteness and specificity

In English, the
definiteness In linguistics, definiteness is a semantic feature of noun phrases, distinguishing between referents or senses that are identifiable in a given context (definite noun phrases) and those which are not (indefinite noun phrases). The prototypical d ...
of a noun phrase is usually marked on the determiner, not on adjectives. But certain adjectives, in particular superlatives, are mostly incompatible with an indefinite interpretation of the NP. Cases like ''*they were best students'' seem ungrammatical, though exceptions such as ''they were best friends'' exist. In cases such as ''a best-case scenario, best-case'' is a
nominal Nominal may refer to: Linguistics and grammar * Nominal (linguistics), one of the parts of speech * Nominal, the adjectival form of "noun", as in "nominal agreement" (= "noun agreement") * Nominal sentence, a sentence without a finite verb * Nou ...
, not a full NP. Non-superlatives can also work in this way. The adjectives ''wrong'' and ''right'' are often incompatible with an indefinite NP (e.g., ''*they found a right person''; here ''suitable'' would be better) but are possible in other cases (e.g., ''there isn't a right answer''). Unlike some languages, English does not mark the specificity of NPs grammatically. But NPs with adjective modifiers such as ''specific'' or ''certain'' are generally interpreted specifically, while those with adjective modifiers such as ''arbitrary'' are generally interpreted non-specifically.


Grammar–semantics


Pre-head vs post-head modification

A noun phrase with an adjective phrase functioning as a pre-head modifier may have a different interpretation from one with the same modifier appearing after the head noun. For example, ''the visible stars'' can mean either those stars that are visible at a particular time or those that are generally visible. In contrast, ''the stars visible'' does not have the "generally visible" interpretation.


Compounds vs modifiers

The semantic contribution of adjectives as modifiers in a noun phrase is typically quite different from the semantic contribution of the same adjective as a base in a
compound Compound may refer to: Architecture and built environments * Compound (enclosure), a cluster of buildings having a shared purpose, usually inside a fence or wall ** Compound (fortification), a version of the above fortified with defensive struc ...
word. A ''green house'', for instance, is a house that is green in colour, but a ''greenhouse'' is neither green in colour nor a house. Similarly, ''a bigmouth'' is not a mouth that is big, nor is a ''highway'' a way that is high or ''software'' ware that is soft. The
phonology Phonology is the branch of linguistics that studies how languages or dialects systematically organize their sounds or, for sign languages, their constituent parts of signs. The term can also refer specifically to the sound or sign system of a ...
of these pairs also differs. With the adjective as a modifier in a noun phrase, the adjective and the noun typically receive equal stress (''a black bird''), but in a compound, the adjective typically takes primary word stress (''a blackbird''). Only a small set of English adjectives function in this way:Bauer, Laurie. "Adjectives, Compounds, and Words." ''Nordic Journal of English Studies'', vol. 3, no. 1, pp.7–22, . * The colour words ''black'', ''blue'', ''brown'', ''green'', ''grey'', ''red'', and ''white'' * ''Grand'' in words of family relationships * A set of
monosyllabic In linguistics, a monosyllable is a word or utterance of only one syllable. It is most commonly studied in the fields of phonology and morphology and it has no semantic content. The word has originated from the Greek language. "Yes", "no", "jump", ...
gradable adjectives such as: ''broad'', ''dry'', ''free'', ''hard'', ''hot'', ''mad'', ''small'', ''sweet'', etc. * A small set of non-gradable monosyllabic adjectives: ''blind'', ''dumb'', ''first'', ''quick'' (= 'alive'), ''square'', ''whole'' * A very small number of disyllabic adjectives: ''bitter'', ''narrow'' and possibly ''silly''


Notes

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References

English grammar Adjectives by language