Adjectives (CRP 2016)
Adjectives (CRP 2016)
Adjectives (CRP 2016)
Hisan
Course # 10 Adjectives
[Qualifying Adjectives; Construction of Adjectives; The Adjective and Other Word-Classes: Adverbs,
Participles, Nouns; Syntactic Classification of Adjectives; Semantic Classification of Adjectives; Marked /
Unmarked Adjectives; Gradability: Comparison; Order of (Prenominal) Adjectives]
ON QUALIFYING1 ADJECTIVES
The qualifying adjectives are invariable (as far as gender and number are concerned) and most often occupy
one of four positions. They occur:
prenominally2 (i.e., before the noun)
after the copula (i.e., as predicate / predicative adjectives) or
after a complex transitive verb and a direct object (i.e., as object complements).
after the noun (Sometimes an adjective will follow a noun or a pronoun in the absence of a complex
transitive verb. These are postnominal adjectives.) [after Berk, 1999: 168-169]
Therefore, while most adjectives are placed comfortably and almost invariably in front of the noun (phrase)
they qualify, some adjectives may follow the noun (phrase): 1
whenever emphasis is needed (mother dear, instead of dear mother);
when more adjectives than one are used emphatically (a writer both witty and wise, a face thin and
pale; A combustion irresistible, all-devouring, omni-prevalent, immediate... (E. A. Poe, The
Conversation of Eiros and Charmion));
in set phrases (Court Martial, sum total, ambassador extraordinary, Asia Minor, attorney / postmaster /
secretary general, letters patent, knight errant, the Poet Laureate, the Theatre Royal, from time immemorial,
heir apparent, chairman / President elect, God Almighty);
in expressions of size, time (2 meters long, 8 years old);
when followed by an infinitive (a man difficult to please, a boy eager to answer);
when followed by a prepositional phrase (a man greedy for money, matters worthy of attention, a mistake
typical of beginners);
1 L. Budai (2002 [1997], p. 375): qualitative adjectives (denoting qualities of size, shape, age etc.), that have degrees of
comparison, and relative adjectives (which characterize an object through its relation to another object: woollen gloves,
wooden houses etc.), that have no degrees of comparison. Another semantic classification of adjectives distinguishes
between:
qualitative adjectives (indicating quality, gradable);
classifying adjectives (identify someone or something as a member of a class, non-gradable: British, daily,
electric, financial, medieval, mental, real, sufficient, Victorian);
colour adjectives;
emphasizing adjectives (emphasizing our feelings about the person / thing we are talking about: absolute,
complete, entire, perfect, pure, true, utter, very).
Some adjectives can be either qualitative or classifying, depending on the meaning that we want to convey (e.g. an
emotional person vs. the emotional needs of children).
2 Prenominal adjectives are sometimes called attributive. This terminology is somewhat misleading, however, because
adjectives in other positions also attribute some quality to the noun head they modify. [Berk, 1999: 169]
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
when the adjectives form an apposition (It was a summer night, warm and sunlit.);
when adjectives are preceded by the definite article and modify a proper noun (Alfred the Great);
sometimes, if they end in able or ible (not sensible, unreasonable etc. but: It was the only thing notable.
This is an offer available to employees only.);
with elect and proper (the President elect, the interview proper);
when adjectives modify indefinite pronouns 3 (nothing bad, nobody new, someone new, somebody
important, something strange etc.).
See also:
"Upon the succession of a proprietor so young/1, with a character so well-known/2, to a fortune so
unparalleled/3, little speculation was afloat in regard to his probable course of conduct." (E. A. Poe,
Metzengerstein)
Other adjectives can either precede or follow the noun, but with a change of significance (Summon the employees
responsible for this disaster. / He is quite a responsible executive. Or: I put down the present address, just in case. / All the
people present were stunned.)
Collins Cobuild Grammar draws attention to the following:
The adjectives DESIGNATE, ELECT, GALORE, INCARNATE, and MANQU are only used
immediately after a noun. Ex. She was now president elect. There are empty houses galore.
The adjectives BROAD, DEEP, HIGH, LONG, OLD, TALL, THICK, and WIDE are used immediately
after measurement nouns when giving the size, duration, or age of a thing or person. ...six feet tall;
...three metres wide; ...twenty five years old.
The adjectives CONCERNED, INVOLVED, PRESENT, RESPONSIBLE, and PROPER have different
meanings depending on whether you put them in front of a noun or immediately after one. For
example, the concerned mother describes a mother who is anxious, but the mother concerned simply 2
refers to a mother who has just been mentioned.
...the approval of interested and concerned parents. / The idea needs to come from the individuals concerned.
...one of those incredibly involved spy switches. / The songs involved are 'That'll Be the Day' and 'In Spite
of All the Danger'.
...the present international situation. / Of the 18 people present, I know only one.
...parents trying to act in a responsible manner. / ...the person responsible for his death.
...a proper training in how to teach. / ...the first round proper of the FA Cup.
The adjectives AFFECTED, AVAILABLE, REQUIRED, and SUGGESTED can be used in front of a
noun or after a noun without any change in meaning.
Newspapers were the only available source of information. / ...the number of teachers available.
...the required changes. / You're way below the standard required.
...the cost of the suggested improvements. / The proposals suggested are derived from successful experiments.
Aside from the affected child, the doctor checks every other member of the household. / ...the proportion of the
population affected.
3 The some- / any- / no- / every- series words are compulsory with adjectives as postmodifiers:
She despised anybody rude.
We wanted to avoid something menacing.
They promised they wouldnt go anywhere dangerous.
She met someone new in the area.
Nothing great has been achieved so far.
I heard something strange today.
There was nothing new on the menu.
Everything necessary has already been done. [SM]
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REMEMBER!
The ing and en participles are used in both attributive position and as postmodifiers:
(a) with no change of meaning: during the approaching season/ during the season
approaching within the agreed time/ within the time agreedon the appointed date/ on
the date appointed
(b) with a change of meaning: the spoken language/ the language spoken the used stamps/
the stamps used the performing dog/ the dog performing [SM]
Bolinger (1967) argues that the adjectives in postposition in (21) express an occasional
property, i.e. a property which the object designated by the noun has on some particular
occasion. This might be a suitable characterization of the effect which postposition of the
modifier has on the meaning of the noun phrases in (21),
[(21) a. the only river navigable vs the only navigable river
b. stars visible vs visible stars]
but it does not account for the meaning that the adjective adjacent has in (22):
(22) buildings adjacent will be closed for three days (Ferris 1993: 45)
Adjacency is hardly an occasional property of an object, as Ferris (1993) remarks in his
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penetrating analysis of the various uses of adjectives in English. According to Ferris both
postnominal and predicative adjectives assign a property to their head nouns, whereas
prenominal adjectives only modify the meaning of the nouns they are subordinated to. Pre-
and postnominal adjectives are part of the noun phrase, predicative adjectives of the sentence.
In postnominal position adjectives are a kind of predicative attribute. [Sleeman, 2011:11-12]
CONSTRUCTION OF ADJECTIVES
Here is a list of qualitative -ing adjectives which are not related to a common transitive use of a verb:
becoming dashing fetching moving pressing ravishing searching
bracing disarming halting penetrating promising retiring taxing
cutting engaging haunting piercing rambling revolting trying
Many compound adjectives are formed with adjectives: well-built; well-bred; well-cooked; time-wasting;
fast-selling; handmade; home-grown; good-looking; short-sighted; ready-made; unheard-of; old-fashioned etc.
(parasynthetic compounds)
Many adjectives have suffixes; some of the most common suffixes are:
-able / -ible (able to be): comfortable, enjoyable, credible, intelligible, forcible
-ful (full of, having): truthful, beautiful
-less (being without, not having): careless, powerless
-ive (tending to, having the nature or quality of doing this): attractive, impulsive
-y: hairy -ish: childish
Some adjectives have prefixes (negative prefixes):
dis-: disagreeable, dishonest im-: impossible, impolite
un-: uninteresting, unnecessary in-: inconvenient, insignificant 4
il-: illegal, illogical ir-: irresponsible, irrelevant
act, care, change, describe, dread, enjoy, forget, motion, rely, submit,
truth
PRACTICE. C o n s t r u c t i o n o f A d j e c t i v e s . Complete the table with the adjectives in the box into
the correct columns:
agreeable, attractive, convenient, destructible, explicable, flexible, friendly, honest, interesting, justified,
legal, legible, literate, logical, mature, moral, mortal, patient, perfect, polite, possible, rational, regular,
relevant, replaceable, responsible, reversible, separable, significant, soluble, tasteful
There are examples of overlapping between the adjective class and other word-classes (due to
common syntactic or semantic features); the 3 relevant word-classes are: adverbs, participles and
nouns.
Certain words beginning with a- have constituted a problem in classification for grammarians, some
assigning them to the adjective class and others to the adverb class; these a-words function
predicatively, but only a few can be freely used attributively; common a-adjectives are: ABLAZE,
ABREAST4, AFIELD5, AFLOAT, AFOOT, AFRAID, AGAPE, AGHAST, AGOG6, AGROUND7, AJAR,
ALERT, ALIGHT, ALIKE, ALIVE, ALONE, ALOOF, AMOK / AMUCK 8 , ASHAMED, ASLEEP,
ASKEW9, AVERSE10, AWAKE, AWARE, AWRY 11; of these, ALERT and ALOOF are freely used
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attributively; some of the other a-adjectives occasionally, though normally when they are modified:
the half-asleep children; the fully awake patient; a somewhat afraid soldier; a very ashamed student.
Certain items that function as adjectives are also used to define in some way the process denoted by
the verb, which is a typical use of adverbs; for example, LONG and STILL, which commonly
function as adjectives, are in pre-verb position in the following sentences and must therefore be
adverbs: Such animals have long had to defend themselves. They still cant make up their minds whether to
go or not.
In other cases there is no corresponding adverb form of the same lexical item, so that only the
adjective form is available: They are working late. We finished early today. They will come round (BE) /
around (AE) afterwards. He always talks big (informal).
Sometimes adjectives are used to express the result of the process denoted by the verb, as in: That
powder washed the clothes white.
In certain uses of SMELL and FEEL, there is considerable idiolectal variation, and perhaps also
fluctuation in the usage of the same individual, between the adjective and adverb forms: The flowers
4 They are running / swimming two abreast. The path was wide enough for two people to walk abreast. They were riding three
abreast. I try to keep abreast of the news / the times / any developments.
5 People came from as far afield as Canada. His question led the discussion far afield. (http://www.merriam-webster.com) His
7 The ship ran aground during the storm. The ship is currently aground off the coast.
8 "His brow was amuck with sweat: he was trembling in every limb; his earswere scarlet." (Nol Coward, Terribly Intimate
Portraits) "Sure, and he climbed in at the window, and white as a haddock, and all amuck with sweat." (Hall Caine, The Deemster)
"A secret affair resulting in plural marriage (polygamy) is adultery gone amok." (Dennis Gonzales)
9 The picture / the hat was slightly askew so I adjusted it.
11 The plans finally went awry. "I was proud of my schoolteacher father. If his suit was out of press, and his necktie knotted awry, I
was too new to the world to notice."(John Updike, New Yorker, 10 Mar. 1997)
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smell good / sweet / sweetly. He felt bad / badly. Adverbs are much less common after TASTE: The
food tastes good. After recipient LOOK and SOUND, it is normal to use adjective forms; there is a
distinction in meaning between the adjectives GOOD and WELL: He looks good. (he has a good
appearance); He looks well. (it looks as if he is well)
There are many adjectives that have the same form as participles in ing or ed: surprising; offended;
they include forms that have not necessarily corresponding verbs: downhearted; talented; diseased.
Some items can be both adjectives and nouns: There was only one black in my class. He is investigating
the ancients conception of the universe. The King greeted his nobles. You wont find many classics in our
library.
Nouns also commonly function attributively, as premodifiers of other nouns: the city council; a stone
wall; a love poem; August weather; in this function, the attributive nouns resemble adjectives.
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construction. In an adjective plus noun construction, the second element (i.e., the noun) carries
primary stress, while in a compound the first element carries the primary stress.
A house that has been painted green is a green house but a place for growing plants is a greenhouse.
A bird which simply happens to be blue is a blue bird, while there is an avian species called a
bluebird.
Gardening may be dirty work, but your boss may expect you to do her dirty work.
A tall chair is a high chair, but if that chair is for a baby, it is a highchair.
Spelling is irrelevant; compound nouns may be written as separate words long after they have
become compounds in speech. There are, in fact, many compounds that are still spelled as two
wordshot tub, yellow jacket (a bee), blue book (an examination booklet), high school, potato salad etc.
A soft spot for animals has a distant semantic relationship to a soft spot on the ground.
Compounds can be found in other grammatical categories as well. Among adjectives we find
pigheaded, foolproof, bloodthirsty, and out-to-lunch and among verbs typeset, stir fry, spot weld, sidestep,
and broadcast.
Occasionally a compound is formed by an NP and a word that was originally a postnominal
adjective, i.e., an adjective that follows the noun. Such compounds tend to refer to quasi-legal or
governmental entitiespresident elect, the body politic, an attorney general, the heir apparent. Just as in
conventional compounds, the stress here falls on the original modifying element, which in this case
is the second word in the compoundpresident elect, body politic.
Usually a compound noun is semantically distinct from a comparable adjective plus noun
counterpart, e.g., a bluebook is a completely different entity from a blue book and a greenhouse has little
in common with a green house. In each of these examples the stress signals the difference.
12 Bear also in mind the substantivized nouns denoting nationality (French francez; the French francezii) and the
personal adjective heads (poor srac; the poor sracii).
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The 2 main syntactic functions of adjectives are their use as attributives and as predicatives.
When an adjective comes before a noun, it is attributive: Shes an intelligent young woman. I simply
love black coffee.
When an adjective is separated from the noun and comes after the verb, it is predicative; an adjective
can follow verbs like: APPEAR, BE, BECOME, COME, FALL, FEEL, GET, GO, GROW, KEEP,
LOOK, MAKE (+ person), PROVE, REMAIN, SEEM, SMELL, SOUND, STAY, TASTE, TURN; it is a
complement of the verb and not an object: The exam was really difficult. She seems worried. Hillary
made me very angry.
Adjectives can be subclassified according to whether they can function as:
both attributive and predicative: a hungry man; The man is hungry.
attributive only: an utter fool
predicative only: They are fond of her. She is ill13.
A few adjectives can have a different meaning as attributive adjectives from their meaning as
predicative adjectives:
Attributive: Jennys a really old friend. (Ive known her for a long time.)
Predicative: Margarets quite old now. (old in age)
Attributive: You are a very heavy sleeper. (You sleep very heavily; you do not wake up easily.)
Predicative: This suitcase is very heavy.
Attributive: His late father used to run the shop. (His father is dead now.)
Predicative: Hes nearly always late. 7
While most adjectives can occur in both prenominal and predicate adjective position, a few are limited to one
position or the other. The adjectives that are limited to prenominal position fall into four general categories:
1) most denominal adjectives
2) a few adjectives derived from nominal forms by means of derivational suffixes
3) present participles functioning as adjectives
4) non-inherent adjectives
5) relationship adjectives [Berk, 1999: 169]
C o m p l e x e x p r e s s i o n s can sometimes be used as prenominal adjectives, especially in informal
conversation.
Roger is an early-to-bed guy.
Linda was a take-charge executive.
My daughter is in her l-canrt-stand-adults phase.
It was a take-no-prisoners situation. [Berk, 1999: 170]
N o n i n h e r e n t a d j e c t i v e s constitute a special class that can only be used prenominally. In most
cases an adjective names some quality held by the noun being modified. Noninherent adjectives, however,
do not actually describe the following noun, but rather another, related noun. In a sentence like Terence is a
big fool, the speaker is not describing the stature of Terence, but rather the extent of his foolishness. An
expression like my old friend refers to the length of the friendship, not to the age of the friend; even a child
can have an old friend. Attila is a poor loser means that Attila is poor at losing, not that he is short of funds
13 Among the health adjectives, UNWELL is sometimes used attributively, too, and SICK (especially in AE) is
normally used attributively as well as predicatively: the sick woman; The woman is sick.
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
and a wooden actor is one whose acting is wooden, not a marionette. When a noninherent adjective is moved
to predicate adjective position, its meaning changes and it loses its noninherent status. The meaning of old in
my old roommate is quite different from that of old in My roommate is old. [Berk, 1999: 171]
CASE OF CURIOSITIES
NOUNS AS ADJECTIVES
There are some nouns that have, over the centuries, taken on real adjective status. In a sentence
like The building is stone, stone is a descriptor, not a coreferential NP. Nouns that name the
materials out of which things are made often take on this descriptive function and they can
appear in both prenominal and predicate adjective position.
This is a brick wall. / The wall is brick.
This is a cardboard table. / The table is cardboard.
This is a paper hat. / The hat is paper.
That is a tin can. / That can is tin.
Even adjectives that have been derived from nouns via derivational morphology occasionally
resist predicate adjective position. We speak of atomic scientists but no one would say *Those
scientists are atomic; Jack the Ripper was described as a serial killer but no journalist would have
written that "The killer was serial." The phrase presidential assistant means something quite
different from the assistant was presidential. [Berk, 1999: 170]
ADJECTIVE RESISTANCE TO COORDINATION
You will find that two or more adjectives that derive from different parts of speech sometimes
resist being coordinated with and. While a scientist may be tall and handsome, he cannot be *tall
and atomic. A horse might be strong and beautiful but we would never speak of the *beautiful and
galloping horse. Furthermore, not all adjectives derived from nouns can be coordinated. Rugby
might be described as a bloody and dangerous sport but not a *bloody and national sport.
Relationship adjectives and noninherent adjectives seldom coordinate with other types. 8
*Martha's former and rich boss is coming to dinner, and *My old and brilliant roommate is visiting next
week are ungrammatical, although An old and dear friend is visiting is fine. Past participle
adjectives are quite flexible and can be coordinated with many other adjective typesThe witty
and talented Bette Midler is being honored tonight; He is a quiet and reserved man; It was an exciting
and animated performance. This is a measure of how thoroughly some past participles have taken
on adjective status. [Berk, 1999: 171]
ATTRIBUTIVE ONLY:
2. Restrictive Qualify the noun / restrict a certain person; his chief excuse; the exact
14 Intensifying adjectives: emphasizers have a general heightening effect; amplifiers scale upwards from an assumed
norm; downtoners have a lowering effect, usually scaling downwards from an assumed norm.
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
adjectives the reference of the noun answer; the main / sole reason; the only
exclusively. occasion; the specific point; the same
student; a particular child; the very man
In phrases like an utter fool, a complete disaster, a total failure, an absolute idiot, and a real mess, the
prenominal adjectives do not carry much meaning of their own; instead they intensify the meaning of the
noun. When someone says, "My brother-in-law is a real idiot," the speaker is using real to underscore the
extent of the idiocy, not to express the opposite of "imaginary." Such adjectives are called intensifying 9
adjectives and they are often interchangeableMy best friend is an utter/total/complete/absolute/real failure.
Sometimes horrible and terrible can be used in this way as wellIt was a terrible mess; It was a horrible fiasco.
While most intensifying adjectives can be used in both positive and negative contexts, horrible and terrible are
usually reserved for unpleasant situations. *The party was a horrible success would be anomalous for most
speakers, and ?The party was a terrible success would be problematic for many.
Intensifiers vary in their ability to act as subject complements. Total and absolute retain their intensifying
meaning in predicate adjective position The destruction was absolute; The chaos was total.
Complete is somewhat marginal in this regard?The destruction was complete. Utter cannot occur in predicate
adjective position at all, and real loses its intensifier status when it occupies this position The destruction
was real.
English also contains constructions that downplay rather than intensify meaning. These constructions
precede the entire noun phrase rather than the noun head, so they are not technically adjectives. Since there
is no traditional grammatical label for these constructions, they are known simply by their semantic label,
downtoner.
He ate only the grapes. [He didn't eat the apples, oranges, or bananas.]
I invited just the women. [Not the men]
Only Evelyn knew the answer. [No one else knew the answer]
Just the oak trees survived. [Nothing else survived.]
Only the bedroom was ransacked. [No other room was ransacked.]
PREDICATIVE ONLY:
Adjectives that are restricted or virtually restricted to predicative are most like verbs and adverbs;
they tend to refer to a (possibly temporary) condition rather than to characterize; we include here the
health adjectives (ill, sick, well / unwell, fine, poorly), some adjectives describing feelings (content,
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sorry, upset etc.) and a larger group of adjectives that can take complementation: able (to), afraid (of /
that / about), aware (of / that), conscious (that / of), fond (of), glad (to / that / about / of), happy (to / that / with
/ that), subject (to), tantamount (to) etc., also: near and far (away), alike, averse.
Criteria for establishing Adjective Classes (Table 5:1, p. 233, Quirk I):
hungry + + + +
infinite + + - -
utter + - - -
tantamount - + - -
ablaze - + - -
abroad - - - -
soon - - + +
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
GALORE
Galore a peripheral but nonetheless widely-attested postnominal expression. 11
Resistance to subject positions (??Boulders galore rolled down the hill).
Resistance to heavy NP complements reminiscent of how attributive adjectives
behave (??boulders of solid granite galore; cf. *a proud of his children father).
Galore occurs only to the immediate right of an NP:
(9) a. We found [NP angry chickens] galore.
b. The email contained [NP pictures of lolcats] galore.
(10) a. *We found galore [NP angry chickens ].
b. *The email contained galore [NP pictures of lolcats].
It is in fact an NP rather than a bare noun, as (9) shows. This constituent cannot be a
full DP:
(11) *We found [DP the / these / my / some / angry chickens] galore.
With just this much, though, one might venture a denotation. Chickens galore seems
to mean something like many chickens, so perhaps galore means precisely the same
thing as many? This immediately runs into a problem, however. Unlike many, galore
occurs with mass NPs:
(14) a. In the cave, we found guano galore.
b. There was equivocation galore in that paper.
What seems to be necessary is a hybrid of many and much...
One welcome consequence of such a denotation is that the sense that galore is a
hybrid of many and much is immediately accounted for. In Chierchias system, the
property counterpart of a kind is always mass, because its extension includes both
singular and plural individuals. Because of this, galore always quantifies over masses,
even when combined with a count NP. It thereby neutralizes the plural-mass
distinction that distinguishes many from most.
Galore is a positive polarity item:
(21) *There werent chickens galore. [Morzycki, Quantification Galore, 2011]
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a b c a b c a b c
forgotten written
A dj e ct i ve s a s he a ds o f NP s
(1) adjectives which can premodify personal nouns (the rich, the poor).
They can be pre modified (The badly injured were taken to the hospital ... The
physically handicapped need social assistance.) and post modified (The old who
resist change can expect violence).
(2) adjectives denoting nationalities: the British, the Irish, the English / Welsh
/ Dutch / French can be premodified by adjectives, not by adverbs: The conservative
Welsh.
(3) some adjectives function as NP heads with abstract reference. They
also include superlatives, especially when we refer to things: She feared the
unknown. The very worst was yet to come. [SM]
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English Syntax: From Word to Discourse (Lynn M. Berk, Oxford University Press, New York,
1999)
Prepositional Phrases as Adjective Complements
Predicat(iv)e adjectives are often followed by prepositional phrases that are clearly working with the
adjective in a single grammatical structure. Such prepositional phrases are called adjective complements.
The relationship of the prepositional phrase to the preceding adjective is semantically rather like the
relationship of a direct object to the preceding verb. In a sentence like Kate is fond of Henry, fond of Henry is an
adjective phrase containing an adjective head fond and its complement of Henry.
In the following sentences the adjective complements are in boldface.
Joseph was jealous of the new baby.
I am glad of that.
I'm aware of her problems.
Ted is resentful of Philip's success.
The children are afraid of spiders.
She is certain of her daughter's victory.
jack is bad at math.
My father is mad at our neighbor. [Berk, 1999: 184]
(a) (b) 13
Cassie walked into the room mad. The river froze solid.
Charley sleeps nude. The box broke open.
Mary arrived drunk. A door slammed shut.
The river froze solid.
The box broke open.
They emerged from the building alive.
Constructions like these pose a number of problems. Clearly the adjectives in these sentences are not
required for grammaticality; they are not complements in the technical sense. Furthermore, all of these verbs
are typical intransitive verbs; none are copulas. Yet, each of the adjectives in column (a) modifies the subject
by indicating what state it is in and each of the adjectives in column (b) modifies the subject by specifying a
resultant state. The term adjunct adjective is sometimes used to describe such forms because the adjective is
an optional construction. In addition, some of these adjectives do seem to have an adverbial quality. For
example, Mary arrived drunk might be paraphrased as Mary arrived while she was drunk and Cassie walked
into the room mad might be paraphrased as Cassie walked into the room while she was mad; in each case the
boldface clause in the paraphrase is an adverb of time (Culicover, 1988, p. 53). [Berk, 1999: 207-208]
3 semantic scales are applicable to adjectives (we are dealing with scales rather than with a feature
that is present or absent).
1. Stative / Dynamic (adjectives are characteristically stative but some of them can be seen as dynamic,
especially those susceptible to subjective measurement; a stative adjective such as TALL cannot be
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used with the progressive aspect or the imperative, whereas CAREFUL can: Hes being careful. Be
careful!; adjectives that can be used dynamically include: abusive, adorable, ambitious, awkward, brave,
calm, careful, careless, cheerful, clever, complacent, conceited, cruel, disagreeable, dull, enthusiastic,
extravagant, faithful, foolish, friendly, funny, generous, gentle, good, greedy, hasty, helpful, impatient,
irritable, irritating, jealous, kind, lenient, loyal, mischievous, naughty, nice, noisy, obstinate, patient, playful,
reasonable, rude, sensible, serious, shy, slow, spiteful, stubborn, stupid, suspicious, tactful, talkative,
thoughtful, tidy, timid, troublesome, unfaithful, vain, vicious, vulgar, wicked, witty etc.)
2. Gradable / Non-gradable (most adjectives are gradable; all dynamic adjectives are gradable
meaning they can be modified by adverbs which convey the degree of intensity of the adjective;
gradability includes comparison (tall taller the tallest) and other forms of intensification (very /
extremely / so tall); non-gradable adjectives cannot be qualified by words like VERY, TOO, ENOUGH;
non-gradable adjectives include: absolute, complete (but not always), dead, empty, entire, fatal, final, full,
ideal, impossible, inevitable, inferior, irrevocable, legal, major, manifest, medical, minor, paramount,
perpetual, principal, stationary, sufficient, superior, unanimous, unavoidable, unconscious, unique,
universal, weekly etc. (where the meaning is strictly defined and cannot be qualified) or: amazing
(sometimes), astonished, delicious, hilarious, perfect, terrible, wonderful (where the meaning is very
strong, if not in the superlative already) 15)
3. Inherent Non-inherent (most adjectives are inherent meaning they characterize the referent of
the noun directly; the inherent adjective in a wooden cross applies to the referent of the object directly:
a wooden cross is also a wooden object; on the other hand, in a wooden actor, the adjective is non-
inherent.) 14
Semantic Classification of Stative Gradable Inherent
Adjectives (Table 5:2, p. 266,
Quirk I)
brave (man) - + +
black (coat) + + +
new (friend) + + -
British (citizen) + - +
PRACTICE. I n h e r e n t A d j e c t i v e s . Say if the adjectives in the following sentences are inherent in the
context:
15 We can add, however, some strength to these words by preceding them with ABSOLUTELY or REALLY: absolutely
wonderful, really amazing.
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
Epithet Classifier
fresh bread (= freshly made) fresh water (i.e. not salty, not sea-water)
a sick person sick pay, sick leave
new houses (= recently built) new rooms (new to the occupier)
to do that would be criminal the criminal court
a medieval state of sanitation a medieval castle
a provincial attitude a provincial town
15
MARKED vs. UNMARKED ADJECTIVES
A few commonly used scalar opposites exhibit markedness. In the context of pairs of adjectives, markedness
reflects the fact that one member of the pair represents the "norm" in the grammar. Short and tall are
opposites that refer to height, but tall is the more generally used and therefore "unmarked" form. No matter
how short an individual is, the appropriate question is "How tall are you?" Short and long usually behave in
the same way (although the constraints on short are somewhat less stringent). If you go to a hardware store
to buy piece of lumber, the clerk will probably ask "How long do you want it?" Although young is the
opposite of old, we ask even three-year-olds, "How old are you?" Tall, long, and old are the commonly used
unmarked adjectives. Short and young are considered marked, even though they don't carry any special
morphology, because they are used in more limited circumstances.
Unmarked adjectives can be modified by measurement termsThe child was eight years old; The room was
ten feet long, but marked adjectives cannot *Tom was two years young; *The room was ten feet short. (The
last sentence is possible in a different context, one in which the room is ten feet short of some goal.) When
someone says "I am seventy years young," we smile in part because young is a highly marked form here.
[Berk, 1999: 177]
GRADABILITY
COMPARISON
One-syllable adjectives: young, big, short younger, bigger, shorter the youngest, the biggest, the
shortest
Two-syllable adjectives ending in Y: lovely, lovelier, prettier, funnier the loveliest, the prettiest, the
pretty, funny funniest
Other two-syllable adjectives: pleasant, more pleasant / annoyed / the most pleasant / annoyed /
16
annoyed, modern, careful, careless modern / careful / careless modern / careful / careless
Adjectives of 3 or more syllables: expensive, more expensive / attractive the most expensive / attractive
attractive, exciting, intelligent / exciting / intelligent / exciting / intelligent
Adjectives with irregular comparatives and better, worse, farther / the best, the worst, the
superlatives: further , less, worse, older
16 farthest / the furthest, the
good, bad, far, little, ill, old, much / many / / elder , more
17 least, the worst, the oldest /
some eldest, the most
16 Farther / the farthest refer to distance in space, whereas further / the furthest more to distance in time.
17 Elder is used especially with members of the family (my elder sister etc.)
18 One-syllable adjectives ending in single vowel and single consonant double the consonant when followed by er and
est respectively.
19 One-syllable adjectives ending in e only add r for the comparative and st for the superlative.
20 Adjectives ending in Y preceded by consonant will have ier and iest for comparative and superlative, respectively.
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
17
Note: The monosyllabic adjectives real, right and wrong can only take periphrastic forms:
real -more real -most real
2. Disyllabic / twosyllable adjectives. Although Swan (1991: 143) holds that a simple rule for two
syllable adjectives is use (periphrastic) more and most (forms) except for the ones ending in y, the pattern
of comparison very much varies according to their ending and the stress they take.
2.1. Disyllabic / two syllable adjectives ending in le/l/-ly, -er, -ure and ow are used with both
patterns of comparison : able, feeble, humble, gentle, noble, simple, early, friendly, lovely, manly, ugly,
clever, tender, mature, obscure, hollow, narrow, shallow.
2.2. Sometimes used with periphrastic forms, disyllabic adjectives ending in y, however, favour
the use of inflectional forms: angry, clumsy, bloody, easy, funny, happy, merry, noisy, pretty, tidy, wealthy,
gloomy, guilty, haughty, healthy, heavy, hungry, lofty, lucky, ready.
2.3. Some first syllable stress disyllabic adjectives, such as common, cruel, handsome, lonesome,
pleasant, quiet, solid, stupid, tender, wicked, etc., can be used with either inflectional or periphrastic forms.
2.4. Disyllabic adjectives ending in a stressed syllable may also take both forms of comparison:
absurd, complete, intense, minute, obscure, polite, profound, remote, severe, sincere, etc.
2.5. Adjectives such as active, afraid, alive, comic, correct, distinct, docile, fertile, sterile, eager,
exact, foolish, morose, proper, recent, stupid, tiring are used with periphrastic forms only.
Note: Both monosyllabic and disyllabic adjectives usually take periphrastic comparison when they are
predicative and are followed by a than clause:
Helen was more sad than her friend at the news.
Could you think of a man more wicked than he is?
They are more happy than ever.
3. Plurisyllabic (three or more syllable)adjectives can only take periphrastic forms, except for the negative
forms of two syllabic adjectives tending in y, prefixed with un-, which can take both types of comparison:
unhappy -unhappier -unhappiest
untidy -untidier -untidiest
Note: Participle forms used as adjectives regularly take periphrastic forms: interested, interesting, wounded,
torn. [SM]
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
18
2006: 487]
T h e d e g r e e o f s u f f i c i e n c y . This comprises three terms: excess, sufficiency, insufficiency,
realised by the adverbs too, enough, not enough, respectively. When functioning predicatively, that is at Cs,
the AdjG structure is as follows:
If the noun is uncountable or plural (e.g. weather, knives), only the predicative structure is used for the
expression of excess:
excess: The weather was too wet. *It was too wet weather.
These knives are too sharp. *These are too sharp knives.
The degree of excess can be expressed by the lexical item over (AmE overly) used as a compound adjective:
Dont be over-anxious about the future. [Downing & Locke, 2006: 488]
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
MORE ON SUPERLATIVES
MOST can sometimes mean very:
She is most beautiful. It is a most interesting novel. [old course]
Be aware that {-est} and most are not always superlative forms. Sometimes
speakers use these forms as intensifiers without implying a comparison.
I am dating the most wonderful woman.
Rachel is the nicest person.
He is a most happy baby.
This is the worst course.
In each of these sentences most or {-est} is semantically closer to the
intensifier very than the superlative. [Berk, 1999: 176]
What is the effect of superlatives in the following texts?
1. "...it is not too much too say that they were the handsomest pair of
whiskers under the sun. At all events, they encircled, and at times partially
overshadowed, a mouth utterly unequalled. Here were the most entirely
even, and the most brilliantly white of all conceivable teeth." (E. A. Poe,
The Man That Was Used Up)
2. Arousing from the most profound of slumbers, we break the gossamer
web of some dream. [...] It seemed evident that mine was not, at least, the
most hideous of fates. (E. A. Poe, The Pit and the Pendulum)
able,
healthy,
bad,
ill,
clever, common,
intelligent, narrow,
concise, confused,
perfect, pleasant,
distinct,
real,
delightful,
simple
dry, far, fat,
19
PRACTICE. Fill in the blanks with the comparative and superlative degrees of the adjectives listed. Do any
of them require more and most? [Kolln, 2012: ex. 52 / 255]
Semantic sets accounting for the usual order of co-occurrent adjectives (Quirk et al.):
Intensifying Post- General General Adjectives Adjectives Denominal Denominal
adjectives determiners adjectives adjectives denoting denoting adjective adjectives
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
a real hero, a the fourth careful, wealthy, young, old, red, black a silken British ship,
perfect idiot student, the naughty, large, new handkerchief, Parisian
only lovely square a metallic dress
occasion substance /
metallic voice,
silken hair,
cat-like stealth
When 2 or more adjectives are used together, subjective adjectives, that express an opinion
(BORING, LOVELY, UGLY) are used before objective, concrete adjectives (OLD, RED, SQUARE)
Objective adjectives have the following order:
SIZE AGE SHAPE COLOUR ORIGIN MATERIAL PURPOSE21
Comparatives and superlatives normally come in front of all other adjectives in a noun group: ex.
...better parental control; ...the highest monthly figures on record.
When adjectives are concerned with SMELL or LUSTER, the order goes as follows:
20
Order: second, last
Weight: heavy
21 The comma separates the adjectives of equal emphasis: Hes an ignorant, selfish old man. When 2 gradable adjectives
come before the noun, we can put either a comma or AND between them: an attractive, big garden or an attractive and big
garden. 2 ungradable adjectives have AND between them if they are from the same class, but AND is not used if they are
from different classes: mud and straw houses; financial and political conditions; improving financial conditions.
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
What is it How How What What Where was it What is it made Noun
like? big? old? shape? colour? made? from? / What
type is it?
21
FOUR PREMODIFICATION ZONES [Quirk et al., 1985, apud Pastor Gmez, 2009]
As already noted, there is a general rule whereby the more objective and unquestionable modifiers are
placed closer to the head of the NP, whereas the more subjective ones are placed further away. This
implies that nouns are closer to the head noun, while adjectives (especially descriptive ones) will precede
those modifying nouns.
(8) A touching private poetry reading
In this NP, the descriptive adjective touching precedes the classifying adjective private, which itself precedes
the modifying noun poetry; both are premodifiers of the head noun reading.
Thus, positions closer to the head noun are filled by descriptive modifiers, which are more integral to the
identification, classification, or description of the head noun referent. (Biber et al., 1999: 599).
Along the same lines, Quirk et al. (1985: 1339) distinguish four different premodification zones: precentral,
central, postcentral, and prehead position. Non-gradable adjectives are situated in precentral position,
gradable adjectives are placed in central position, whereas participles and colour adjectives are left in
postcentral position. In prehead position are the least adjectival and most nominal modifiers (adjectives
denoting nationality, style, provenance; denominal adjectives and nouns). Figure II illustrates this
classification. [Pastor Gmez, 2009: 24-25]
Figure II Premodification zones
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
NP
pattern and they are not followed by pauses; only the noun receives primary stress (Hill 1958,
Lance 1968, Martin 1970, Martin and Ferb 1973).
(137) a. a beautiful small black cat
b. # a beautiful black small cat
c. # a small beautiful black cat
d. # a small black beautiful cat
Example (138) shows nouns that are modified by more than three adjectives at a time. [...]
Examples with long strings of multiple modifiers such as these are relatively rare, most nouns
being modified by one or two adjectives at a time (see report from Biber et al):
(138) a. a big new brown French leather jacket (Lance 1968:210)
b. a magnificent ornamental 18th century carved mahogany mantelpiece (Halliday
1994:192) [Teodorescu, Modification in the Noun Phrase, 2009: 110-111]
(141) How adjectives are ordered (AOR):
a. Identifying adjectives >Characterizing adjectives >Classificatory adjectives
(Teyssier 1968)
b. Evaluative >Color, Age, Shape, Size >Denominal, Nationality/Provenance (Hill
1958)
c. Evaluative/Quality >Size >Shape >Age >Color >Participle >Nationality/ Provenance
>Denominal adjective (Quirk et al. 1972)
d. Value >Dimension >Physical property >Speed >Human Propensity >Age >Color
>Denominal adjective (Dixon 1982)
e. Quality >Size >Shape >Color >Provenance (Sproat and Shih 1991)
Teyssier (1968) for example, uses three semantic classes ordered as in (141a). The identifying
class contains adjectives like same, only and first. The classificatory class consists of adjectives
pointing to a specimen of a class, such as denominal, nationality and relational adjectives, as
well as other adjectives that have come to form a compound with the noun (e.g. blackbird,
blue-bell), the latter being left aside in our subsequent discussion. The characterizing class
23
contains the rest of the adjectives. [Teodorescu, Modification in the Noun Phrase, 2009: 113]
[C]ases of flexible word order
Exceptions to AOR:
a. adjectives that resemble Relative Clauses
b. adjectives that bear comma intonation
(144) a. the large red chair (Size >Color)
b. the red, large chair (Color >Size)
When adjectives are used in a series, the determiner is followed by the ordinal number + cardinal
number + adjectives: the first three German students; his second car; the next few lesson [SM]
Occasionally, a cardinal numeral may be used before an ordinal numeral with a difference of
meaning. Compare: the first three prizes (i.e. first prize, second prize and the third prize) vs. the three
first prizes (i.e. there were three first prizes) [SM]
Mind the affective connotation of LITTLE, which tends to be placed very close to the noun, as
compared to synonym SMALL, that refers to size exclusively, no particular connotation, therefore
will occupy the initial position in SASCOMP.
When two descriptive adjectives are used together, they are separated in speech by a comma
pause and in writing by a comma: She was reading a long, fascinating book. (where the shorter
adjective precedes the longer one)
If intensified, the intensifier precedes the adjective(s): He was reading a terribly fascinating book. [SM]
Nouns as adjectives in attributive position that come immediately before the Nheads are almost
always used in the singular: They live in a pretty little yellow brick house. [SM]
After the Nhead comes any prepositional phrase that occurs in a NP: They live in a big white house on
Oak street. She was talking to a funny little man in a blue suit. [SM]
Some adjectives, normally predicative, can become attributive if modified: The child is awake. The
wide-awake child started to cry.
Besides attributive and predicative, some adjectives occur in postposition: e.g. the people present, the
seats available.
The adjectives LAST, NEXT and PAST can follow as well as precede the noun:
They arrived last Monday / on Monday last.
She graduated last June / in June last. 24
They will leave next Sunday / on Sunday next.
remembrance of things past (Shakespeare, Sonnet XXIX).
speech: long, tedious, incoherent coin: Greek, small, beautiful, brown, metal, old
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
PRACTICE. Consider the order of the epithets and classifiers in the following sentences. Change the order if
you think it is necessary, and say why. [Downing & Locke, 2006: 469]
(1) It was an unforgettable, heart-breaking sad sight.
(2) We heard a tinkling, mysterious, faint sound.
(3) Her artistic, slender, long hands fluttered in the air.
(4) She had a pair of designer, exotic-looking, smart sunglasses.
(5) The lavatory was a wooden, brown, smallish box inserted in the floor.
(6) We drove through the granite, wooded, threatening, dark mountains.
PRACTICE. Classify the following adjectives in the following extracts according to their meaning. Consider
the syntactic classification, the semantic categories and their construction.
This loud-mouthed guy in the brown camel-hair I knew Salvatore first when he was a boy of 15 with a
coat was not really mean, he was drunk. pleasant, ugly face, a laughing mouth and carefree
eyes.
He took a sudden dislike to the small well-dressed
Filipino and began to order him around telling him They settled down in a tiny whitewashed house in 25
to get back, not to crowd among the white people. the middle of a handsome vineyard.
PRACTICE. Write very short sentences using the following formal types of compound adjectives. If you are
not sure of the meaning, consult a good dictionary [Downing & Locke, 2006: 522]:
(1) Adj + V-ing: nice-looking, good-looking, easy-going, hard-wearing.
(2) Adj + V-en: deep-frozen, big-headed, sharp-eyed.
(3) Noun + Adj: world-famous, water-tight, self-confident.
PRACTICE. Suggest appropriate nouns or adjectives to form compounds with the following adjectives, e.g.
sea-green. [Downing & Locke, 2006: 522]:
-blue, -green, -pink, -red, -cold, -hot, -black, -sweet, -white.
PRACTICE. Express the following NGs diferently, using a compound adjective as modifier of the head
noun. The first is done for you [Downing & Locke, 2006: 522]:
(1) a story so scarifying that it raises the hair on your head = a hair-raising story
(2) an activity that consumes too much of your time
(3) cakes that have been made at home
(4) a speed that takes your breath away
(5) troops that are borne (= transported) by air
(6) a plain that has been swept by the wind
LEC Morphology D. Hisan
PRACTICE. Say which of the following adjectives take the infected forms (-er, -est) for grading and which the
analytical (more, most): risky, real, varied, blue, typical, mistaken, friendly, userfriendly, small, tight, generous, bitter.
Say which of the adjectives as used in the following phrases can be graded:
(1) shallow water;
(2) the closing date;
(3) a daily newspaper;
(4) a small size;
(5) the probable outcome;
(6) the main reason;
(7) a fast driver;
(8) the political consequences. [Downing & Locke, 2006: 522]
26