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Adjectives
Definition
Adjectives are words that describe or modify another
person or thing in the sentence. The Articles
— a, an, and the — are adjectives.
- the tall professor
- the lugubrious lieutenant
- a solid commitment
- a month's pay
- a six-year-old child
- the unhappiest, richest man
If a group of words containing a subject and verb acts
as an adjective, it is called an Adjective Clause.
My sister, who is much older than I am, is an
engineer. If an adjective clause is stripped of its
subject and verb, the resulting modifier becomes an Adjective
Phrase: He is the man who is
keeping
my family in the poorhouse.
Before getting into other usage considerations, one
general note about the use — or over-use — of
adjectives: Adjectives are frail; don't ask them to do
more work than they should. Let your broad-shouldered
verbs and nouns do the hard work of description. Be
particularly cautious in your use of adjectives that don't
have much to say in the first place: interesting,
beautiful, lovely, exciting. It is your job as a
writer to create beauty and excitement and interest, and
when you simply insist on its presence without showing
it to your reader — well, you're convincing no one.
Consider the uses of modifiers in this adjectivally
rich paragraph from Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel.
(Charles Scribner's, 1929, p. 69.) Adjectives are
highlighted in this color;
participles, verb forms acting as adjectives, are
highlighted in this blue.
He remembered yet the East
India Tea
House at the Fair, the sandalwood, the turbans, and the
robes, the cool interior
and the smell of India tea;
and he had felt now the nostalgic
thrill of dew-wet mornings
in Spring, the cherry
scent, the cool clarion
earth, the wet loaminess of
the garden, the pungent breakfast
smells and the floating snow
of blossoms. He knew the inchoate
sharp excitement of hot
dandelions in young earth;
in July, of watermelons bedded
in sweet hay, inside a
farmer's covered wagon;
of cantaloupe and crated
peaches; and the scent of orange
rind, bitter-sweet, before
a fire of coals. He knew the good
male smell of his father's
sitting-room; of the smooth
worn leather
sofa, with the gaping
horse-hair rent; of the blistered
varnished wood upon the
hearth; of the heated calf-skin
bindings; of the flat moist
plug of apple tobacco, stuck
with a red flag; of
wood-smoke and burnt leaves in
October; of the brown tired
autumn earth; of
honey-suckle at night; of warm
nasturtiums, of a clean ruddy
farmer who comes weekly with printed
butter, eggs, and milk; of fat
limp underdone
bacon and of coffee; of a bakery-oven in the wind; of large
deep-hued stringbeans smoking-hot
and seasoned well with salt
and butter; of a room of old
pine boards in which books
and carpets have been stored, long closed;
of Concord grapes in their long
white baskets.
An abundance of adjectives like this would be uncommon
in contemporary prose. Whether we have lost something or
not is left up to you.
Position
of Adjectives
Unlike Adverbs, which often seem capable of popping
up almost anywhere in a sentence, adjectives nearly always
appear immediately before the noun or noun phrase that
they modify. Sometimes they appear in a string of
adjectives, and when they do, they appear in a set order
according to category. When indefinite pronouns —
such as something, someone, anybody — are modified by an
adjective, the adjective comes after the pronoun:
Anyone capable of doing something horrible
to someone nice should be punished.
Something wicked this way comes.
And there are certain adjectives that, in combination
with certain words, are always "postpositive"
(coming after the thing they modify):
The president elect, heir apparent to
the Glitzy fortune, lives in New York proper.
See, also, the note on a- adjectives, below, for
the position of such words as "ablaze, aloof,
aghast."
Degrees
of Adjectives
Adjectives can express degrees of modification:
Gladys is a rich woman, but Josie is richer
than Gladys, and Sadie's the richest woman in
town.
The degrees of
comparison are known as the positive, the comparative,
and the superlative. (Actually, one the
comparative and superlative show degrees.) We use
the comparative for comparing two things and the
superlative for comparing three or more things.
Notice that the word than frequently
accompanies the comparative and the word the
precedes the superlative. The inflected suffixes -er
and -est suffice to form most comparatives
and superlatives, although we need -ier and
-iest when a two-syllable adjective ends in
y (happier and happiest); otherwise we use more
and most when an adjective has more than
one syllable. |
|
Positive |
Comparative |
Superlative |
rich |
richer |
richest |
lovely |
lovelier |
loveliest |
beautiful |
more beautiful |
most beautiful |
Certain adjectives have irregular forms in the
comparative and superlative degrees:
Irregular
Comparative and Superlative Forms |
good |
better |
best |
bad |
worse |
worst |
little |
less |
least |
much
many
some |
more |
most |
far |
further |
furthest |
Be careful not to form comparatives or superlatives of
adjectives which already express an extreme of comparison
— unique, for instance — although it probably
is possible to form comparative forms of most adjectives:
something can be more perfect, and someone can have
a fuller figure. People who argue that one woman
cannot be more pregnant than another have never
been nine-months pregnant with twins.
Be careful, also, not to use more along with a
comparative adjective formed with -er nor to use most
along with a superlative adjective formed with -est
(e.g., do not write that something is more heavier
or most heaviest).
The as — as construction is used to create a
comparison expressing equality:
- He is as foolish as he is large.
- She is as bright as her mother.
"Taller
than I / me" ?? |
When making a comparison with "than"
do we end with a subject form or object form,
"taller than I/she" or "taller than
me/her." The correct response is "taller
than I/she." We are looking for the subject
form: "He is taller than I am/she is
tall." (Except we leave out the verb in the
second clause, "am" or "is.")
Some good writers, however, will argue that the
word "than" should be allowed to
function as a preposition. If we can say "He
is tall like me/her," then (if
"than" could be prepositional like like)
we should be able to say, "He is taller than
me/her." It's an interesting argument, but
— for now, anyway — in formal, academic prose,
use the subject form in such comparisons. |
The
Order of Adjectives in a Series
It would take a linguistic philosopher to explain why we
say "little brown house" and not "brown
little house" or why we say "red Italian sports
car" and not "Italian red sports car." The
order in which adjectives in a series sort themselves out
is perplexing for people learning English as a second
language. Most other languages dictate a similar order,
but not necessarily the same order. It takes a lot of
practice with a language before this order becomes
instinctive, because the order often seems quite arbitrary
(if not downright capricious). There is, however, a
pattern. You will find many exceptions to the pattern in
the table below, but it is definitely important to learn
the pattern of adjective order if it is not part of what
you naturally bring to the language.
The categories in the following table can be described
as follows:
- Determiners — articles and other limiters.
- Observation — postdeterminers and limiter
adjectives (e.g., a real hero, a perfect idiot) and
adjectives subject to subjective measure (e.g.,
beautiful, interesting)
- Size and Shape — adjectives subject to
objective measure (e.g., wealthy, large, round)
- Age — adjectives denoting age (e.g., young,
old, new, ancient)
- Color — adjectives denoting color (e.g., red,
black, pale)
- Origin — denominal adjectives denoting source
of noun (e.g., French, American, Canadian)
- Material — denominal adjectives denoting what
something is made of (e.g., woolen, metallic, wooden)
- Qualifier — final limiter, often regarded as
part of the noun (e.g., rocking chair, hunting cabin,
passenger car, book cover)
THE
ROYAL ORDER OF ADJECTIVES |
Determiner |
Observation |
Physical
Description |
Origin |
Material |
Qualifier |
Noun |
|
Size |
Shape |
Age |
Color |
|
a |
beautiful |
|
|
old |
|
Italian |
|
touring |
car |
an |
expensive |
|
|
antique |
|
|
silver |
|
mirror |
four |
gorgeous |
|
long-
stemmed |
|
red |
|
silk |
|
roses |
her |
|
|
short |
|
black |
|
|
|
hair |
our |
|
big |
|
old |
|
English |
|
|
sheepdog |
those |
|
|
square |
|
|
|
wooden |
hat |
boxes |
that |
dilapidated |
little |
|
|
|
|
|
hunting |
cabin |
several |
|
enormous |
|
young |
|
American |
|
basketball |
players |
some |
delicious |
|
|
|
|
Thai |
|
|
food |
This chart is probably too wide to print on
a standard piece of paper. You will get a one-page duplicate
of this chart, which you can then print out on a
landscape-oriented page (the long way).
It would be folly, of course, to run more than two or
three (at the most) adjectives together. Furthermore,
when adjectives belong to the same class, they become
what we call coordinated adjectives, and you will want
to put a comma between them: the inexpensive,
comfortable shoes. The rule for inserting the comma
works this way: if you could have inserted a conjunction
— and or but — between the two
adjectives, use a comma. We could say these are
"inexpensive but comfortable shoes," so we
would use a comma between them (when the "but"
isn't there). When you have three coordinated
adjectives, separate them all with commas, but don't
insert a comma between the last adjective and the noun
(in spite of the temptation to do so because you often
pause there):
a popular, respected, and good looking student
See the section on Commas for additional help
in punctuating coordinated adjectives.
Capitalizing
Proper Adjectives
When an adjective owes its origins to a proper noun, it
should probably be capitalized. Thus we write about
Christian music, French fries, the English Parliament,
the Ming Dynasty, a Faulknerian style, Jeffersonian
democracy. Some periods of time have taken on the status
of proper adjectives: the Nixon era, a
Renaissance/Romantic/Victorian poet (but a contemporary
novelist and medieval writer). Directional and seasonal
adjectives are not capitalized unless they're part of a
title:
We took the northwest route during the spring thaw.
We stayed there until the town's annual Fall Festival
of Small Appliances.
Collective
Adjectives
When the definite article, the, is combined with
an adjective describing a class or group of people, the
resulting phrase can act as a noun: the poor, the rich,
the oppressed, the homeless, the lonely, the unlettered,
the unwashed, the gathered, the dear departed. The
difference between a Collective Noun (which
is usually regarded as singular but which can be plural
in certain contexts) and a collective adjective is that
the latter is always plural and requires a plural verb:
- The rural poor have been ignored by the
media.
- The rich of Connecticut are
responsible.
- The elderly are beginning to demand their
rights.
- The young at heart are always a joy to be
around.
Adjectival
Opposites
The opposite or the negative aspect of an adjective can
be formed in a number of ways. One way, of course, is to
find an adjective to mean the opposite — an antonym.
The opposite of beautiful is ugly, the
opposite of tall is short. A thesaurus can
help you find an appropriate opposite. Another way to
form the opposite of an adjective is with a number of
prefixes. The opposite of fortunate is unfortunate,
the opposite of prudent is imprudent, the
opposite of considerate is inconsiderate,
the opposite of honorable is dishonorable,
the opposite of alcoholic is nonalcoholic,
the opposite of being properly filed is misfiled.
If you are not sure of the spelling of adjectives
modified in this way by prefixes (or which is the
appropriate prefix), you will have to consult a
dictionary, as the rules for the selection of a prefix
are complex and too shifty to be trusted. The meaning
itself can be tricky; for instance, flammable and
inflammable mean the same thing.
A third means for creating the opposite of an
adjective is to combine it with less or least
to create a comparison which points in the opposite
direction. Interesting shades of meaning and tone become
available with this usage. It is kinder to say that
"This is the least beautiful city in the
state." than it is to say that "This is the
ugliest city in the state." (It also has a slightly
different meaning.) A candidate for a job can still be worthy
and yet be "less worthy of
consideration" than another candidate. It's
probably not a good idea to use this construction with
an adjective that is already a negative: "He is
less unlucky than his brother," although that is
not the same thing as saying he is luckier than his
brother. Use the comparative less when the
comparison is between two things or people; use the
superlative least when the comparison is among
many things or people.
- My mother is less patient than my father.
- Of all the new sitcoms, this is my least
favorite show.
Some
Problem Children
Good
versus Well |
- In both casual speech and formal writing,
we frequently have to choose between the
adjective good and the adverb
well. With most verbs, there is no
contest: when modifying a verb, use the
adverb.
- He swims well.
- He knows only too well who the
murderer is.
- However, when using a linking verb or
a verb that has to do with the five human
senses, you want to use the adjective instead.
- How are you? I'm feeling good, thank
you.
- After a bath, the baby smells so good.
- Even after my careful paint job, this room
doesn't look good.
- Many careful writers, however, will use well
after linking verbs relating to health, and
this is perfectly all right. In fact, to say
that you are good or that you feel good
usually implies not only that you're OK
physically but also that your spirits are
high.
- "How are you?"
- "I am well, thank you."
|
Bad versus
Badly |
- When your cat died (assuming you loved your
cat), did you feel bad or badly?
Applying the same rule that applies to good
versus well, use the adjective form
after verbs that have to do with human
feelings. You felt bad. If you said you
felt badly, it would mean that
something was wrong with your faculties for
feeling.
|
Other
Adjectival Considerations
Review the section on Compound Nouns and Modifiers
for the formation of modifiers created when words are
connected: a four-year-old child, a nineteenth-century
novel, an empty-headed fool.
Adjectives that are really Participles, verb
forms with -ing and -ed endings, can be
troublesome for some students. It is one thing to be a frightened
child; it is an altogether different matter to be a frightening
child. Do you want to go up to your professor after
class and say that you are confused or that you
are confusing? Generally, the -ed ending
means that the noun so described ("you") has a
passive relationship with something — something
(the subject matter, the presentation) has bewildered
you and you are confused. The -ing ending
means that the noun described has a more active role —
you are not making any sense so you are confusing
(to others, including your professor).
The -ed ending modifiers are often accompanied
by prepositions (these are not the only choices):
- We were amazed at
all the circus animals.
- We were amused by
the clowns.
- We were annoyed by
the elephants.
- We were bored by the ringmaster.
- We were confused by
the noise.
- We were disappointed by
the motorcycle daredevils.
- We were disappointed in
their performance.
- We were embarrassed by my
brother.
- We were exhausted from
all the excitement.
- We were excited by the
lion-tamer.
- We were excited about
the high-wire act, too.
- We were frightened by
the lions.
- We were introduced to
the ringmaster.
- We were interested in
the tent.
- We were irritated by
the heat.
- We were opposed to
leaving early.
- We were satisfied with
the circus.
- We were shocked at
the level of noise under the big tent.
- We were surprised by
the fans' response.
- We were surprised at
their indifference.
- We were tired of
all the lights after a while.
- We were worried about
the traffic leaving the parking lot.
A-
Adjectives
The most common of the so-called a- adjectives
are ablaze, afloat, afraid, aghast, alert, alike, alive,
alone, aloof, ashamed, asleep, averse, awake, aware.
These adjectives will primarily show up as predicate
adjectives (i.e., they come after a linking verb).
- The children were ashamed.
- The professor remained aloof.
- The trees
were ablaze.
Occasionally, however, you will find a- adjectives before
the word they modify: the alert patient, the aloof
physician. Most of them, when found before the word they
modify, are themselves modified: the nearly awake
student, the terribly alone scholar. And a- adjectives
are sometimes modified by "very much": very
much afraid, very much alone, very much ashamed, etc.
[Other
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