Adjectives in English Grammar: Your Essential Student Guide
Adjectives are central to describing people, things and experiences in English. This guide breaks down adjective types, formational processes, syntactic behavior, and practical usage so you can recognize, form, and use adjectives accurately in academic and everyday contexts.
Definition: An adjective is a word or phrase that modifies a noun by providing information such as quality, size, age, temperature, shape, colour, or origin.
Adjectives in English arise in several ways: base adjectives, derivation from nouns and verbs, participial forms, prefixes, and compounding.
Definition: Derivational suffixes attach to a base word to change its part of speech and meaning.
Example: The film was interesting (it causes interest). She felt interested (she experienced interest).
Prefixes commonly produce negative or opposite meanings:
Compound adjectives combine words (often participles, numbers, nouns, or words with suffixes/prefixes):
Adjectives are divided into gradable and non-gradable types.
| Feature | Gradable Adjectives | Non-gradable Adjectives |
|---|---|---|
| Can take intensifiers like "very"/"too"/"enough" | Yes | No |
| Form comparative/superlative (e.g., -er, -est or more/most) | Yes | No |
| Typical examples | big, small, happy, cold | perfect, dead, unique, impossible |
From a syntactic viewpoint, adjectives function in two main ways.
Definition: Attributive adjectives occur before a noun; predicative adjectives occur after a verb and form part of the predicate.
Some adjectives change meaning depending on position. Examples:
Other contrastive pairs: "Jane is late" vs "my late cousin" (late as deceased).
Some adjectives are typically only predicativ
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Klíčové pojmy: Adjectives modify nouns giving quality, size, age, shape, colour, origin, Derivational suffixes form adjectives from nouns: -al, -ary, -ful, -ish, -ly, -ous, -y, Verbal suffixes form adjectives: -able, -ent, -ible, -ive, Participial adjectives: -ing describes cause; -ed describes resultant state, Prefixes (dis-, un-, im-, ir-) usually negate adjective meaning, Compound adjectives: participles, hyphenate before nouns, numbers + nouns (five-year-old), Gradable adjectives accept very/too/enough and comparative/superlative; non-gradable do not, Attributive adjectives occur before nouns; predicative occur after linking verbs, Some adjectives change meaning by position (e.g., old: age vs long-standing), Postpositive adjectives follow nouns and often reflect reduced relative clauses, Use "absolutely" or "completely" with non-gradable adjectives, and hyphenate compounds before nouns