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characteristics of the adjectiveشرح مفصل مع تمارين

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    T2025 characteristics of the adjectiveشرح مفصل مع تمارين

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    What is an Adjective?

    An adjective is a word that tells us more about a noun or a pronoun.
    An adjective describes or modifies a noun.
    Adjective lists that follow each topic are only partial ones.

    Three Questions.

    Adjectives usually answer three questions about the nouns they describe:

    1. What kind of?

    · I found a red rose in the cave.

    · What kind of rose? Red

    2. How many?

    · Three tickets, please.

    · How many tickets? Three.

    3. Which one(s)?

    · I would eat these figs.

    · Which figs? These.

    Kinds of adjectives.

    1. Demonstrative adjective
    This, that, these, those are called demonstrative adjectives. They point out nouns.
    They always answer the question which one?
    In the following example, demonstrative adjectives are shown in color.

    · Lets play this game and later watch that movie.

    Remember that this, that, these, those can also act as demonstrative pronouns in which case they are not followed by nouns (as demonstrative adjectives are), but take the place of nouns.
    In the following example, demonstrative pronouns are shown in color.

    · Lets play this and later watch that.

    2. Common adjective is just a simple, regular adjective. It describes a noun in a general way.
    sharp, flexible, hot, red, hidden, dripping, nice, huge.

    3. Proper adjective is derived from a proper noun and is capitalized.


    Proper noun Proper adjective
    China Chinese
    California Californian
    Mars Martian
    Spain Spanish
    Christianity Christian
    Japan Japanese
    Hollywood Hollywood
    Texas Texas

    Sometimes, as in last two examples, a proper noun does not change at all to become a proper adjective.

    Where an adjective goes in a sentence.

    Usually an adjective comes in front of the noun it is describing.

    · The big balloon floated over the dark sea.

    An adjective can also come after a linking verb, like to be, and describe the subject of the sentence. In this case it is called predicate adjective.

    · The balloon was dark.





    Adjectives - Comparison


    Fill in the missing words into the gaps.
    Positive
    Comparative
    Superlative

    clear



    dark



    good



    fresh



    fit



    big



    deep



    sweet



    high



    expensive
    more expensive
    Most expensive





    hard



    dark



    jealous
    more jealous
    Most jealous

    independent



    incredible



    light



    obvious



    nice



    painful



    northern



    hopeful



    angry
    Angrier
    Angriest

    curious



    deaf



    empty
    Emptier
    Emptiest

    desperate



    concrete



    western



    light



    liberal



    bad
    worse
    worst

    little
    less
    least

    far
    farther
    further
    farthest
    furthest

    old
    Older
    elder
    Oldest
    Eldest

    Much/many
    more
    most






    Fill in the correct form of the words in brackets (comparative or superlative).

    My house is (big) …… ……….. than yours.
    This flower is (beautiful) ……… ………. than that one.
    This is the (interesting) ………………. book I have ever read.
    Non-smokers usually live (long) ……………….. than smokers.
    Which is the (dangerous) ………………….. animal in the world?
    A holiday by the sea is (good) …… …………. than a holiday in the mountains.
    It is strange but often a coke is (expensive) ………………… than a beer.
    Who is the (rich) …………………… woman on earth?
    The weather this summer is even (bad) ………………… than last summer.
    He was the (clever) ……………….. thief of all.
    أسفل النموذج

    Adjectives can be identified using a number of formal criteria. However, we may begin by saying that they typically describe an attribute of a noun:


    cold weather
    large windows
    violent storms


    Some adjectives can be identified by their endings. Typical adjective endings include:




    -able/-ible achievable, capable, illegible, remarkable
    -al biographical, functional, internal, logical
    -ful beautiful, careful, grateful, harmful
    -ic cubic, manic, rustic, terrific
    -ive attractive, dismissive, inventive, persuasive
    -less breathless, careless, groundless, restless
    -ous courageous, dangerous, disastrous, fabulous



    However, a large number of very common adjectives cannot be identified in this way. They do not have typical adjectival form:






    bad
    bright
    clever
    cold
    common
    complete
    dark
    deep
    difficult distant
    elementary
    good
    great
    honest
    hot
    main
    morose
    old quiet
    real
    red
    silent
    simple
    strange
    wicked
    wide
    young


    As this list shows, adjectives are formally very diverse. However, they have a number of characteristics which we can use to identify them.







    Characteristics of Adjectives

    Adjectives can take a modifying word, such as very, extremely, or less, before them:
    very cold weather
    extremely large windows
    less violent storms

    Here, the modifying word locates the adjective on a scale of comparison, at a position higher or lower than the one indicated by the adjective alone.

    This characteristic is known as GRADABILITY. Most adjectives are gradable, though if the adjective already denotes the highest position on a scale, then it is non-gradable:


    my main reason for coming ~*my very main reason for coming
    the principal role in the play ~*the very principal role in the play



    As well as taking modifying words like very and extremely, adjectives also take different forms to indicate their position on a scale of comparison:


    big bigger biggest

    The lowest point on the scale is known as the POSITIVE form, the middle point is known as the COMPARATIVE form, and the highest point is known as the SUPERLATIVE form. Here are some more examples:


    Positive Comparative Superlative
    dark darker darkest
    new newer newest
    old older oldest
    young younger youngest



    In most cases, the comparative is formed by adding -er , and the superlative is formed by adding -est, to the absolute form. However, a number of very common adjectives are irregular in this respect:






    Positive Comparative Superlative
    good better best
    bad worse worst
    far farther farthest



    Some adjectives form the comparative and superlative using more and most respectively:


    Positive Comparative Superlative
    important more important most important
    miserable more miserable most miserable
    recent more recent most recent



    Exercise

    In the following sentences, the highlighted words are adjectives.


    His new car was stolen.

    Gradable

    Absolute

    Something smells good.

    Gradable

    Absolute

    Their restaurant is very successful.

    Gradable

    Absolute

    What an unbelievable story!

    Gradable

    Absolute

    My uncle is an atomic scientist.

    Gradable

    Absolute

    Attributive and Predicative Adjectives

    Most adjectives can occur both before and after a noun:



    the blue sea ~ the sea is blue


    the old man ~ the man is old


    happy children ~ the children are happy




    Adjectives in the first position - before the noun - are called ATTRIBUTIVE adjectives. Those in the second position - after the noun - are called PREDICATIVE adjectives. Notice that predicative adjectives do not occur immediately after the noun. Instead, they follow a verb.

    Sometimes an adjective does occur immediately after a noun, especially in certain institutionalized expressions:

    the Governor General
    the Princess Royal
    times past

    We refer to these as POSTPOSITIVE adjectives. Postposition is obligatory when the adjective modifies a pronoun:

    something useful
    everyone present
    those responsible

    Postpositive adjectives are commonly found together with superlative, attributive adjectives:

    the shortest route possible
    the worst conditions imaginable
    the best hotel available

    Most adjectives can freely occur in both the attributive and the predicative positions. However, a small number of adjectives are restricted to one position only. For example, the adjective main (the main reason) can only occur in the attributive position (predicative: *the reason is main). Conversely, the adjective afraid (the child was afraid) can only occur predicatively (attributive: *an afraid child).

    Exercise
    Assign the highlighted adjectives in each of the following examples to one of the three positions.


    1. The green door opened slowly. a. Attributive
    b. Predicative
    c. Postpositive
    2. This stretch of water is dangerous. a. Attributive
    b. Predicative
    c. Postpositive
    3. The share-holders present voted against the Chairman. a. Attributive
    b. Predicative
    c. Postpositive
    4. Jan feels ill. a. Attributive
    b. Predicative
    c. Postpositive
    5. A larger than normal pay increase was awarded to the nurses. a. Attributive
    b. Predicative
    c. Postpositive



    أسفل النموذج

    Inherent and Non-inherent Adjectives

    Most attributive adjectives denote some attribute of the noun which they modify. For instance, the phrase a red car may be said to denote a car which is red. In fact most adjective-noun sequences such as this can be loosely reformulated in a similar way:


    an old man ~a man who is old


    difficult questions ~questions which are difficult


    round glasses ~glasses which are round




    This applies equally to postpositive adjectives:

    something understood ~something which is understood
    the people responsible ~the people who are responsible

    In each case the adjective denotes an attribute or quality of the noun, as the reformulations show. Adjectives of this type are known as INHERENT adjectives. The attribute they denote is, as it were, inherent in the noun which they modify.

    However, not all adjectives are related to the noun in the same way. For example, the adjective small in a small businessman does not describe an attribute of the businessman. It cannot be reformulated as a businessman who is small. Instead, it refers to a businessman whose business is small. We refer to adjectives of this type as NON-INHERENT adjectives. They refer less directly to an attribute of the noun than inherent adjectives do. Here are some more examples, showing the contrast between inherent and non-inherent:






    Inherent Non-inherent
    distant hills distant relatives
    a complete chapter a complete idiot
    a heavy burden a heavy smoker
    an old man an old friend

  2. #2
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    Thank you so much for this wonderful post and for your great effort .. Hope to see more your magical touches in this section ... Thx again!!

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    Excellent
    keep it up

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