order of adjectives
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UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL DE CHIMBORAZO
Names:• Dario Amancha
GRAMMAR V
ADJECTIVES
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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
DEFINITION
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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. (See Below.) 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.
POSITION OF ADJECTIVES
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Adjectives can express degrees of modification: Gladys is a rich woman, but Josie is richer than Gladys, and Sadie is the richest woman in town. The degrees of comparison are known as the positive, the comparative, and the superlative. (Actually, only the comparative and superlative show degrees.)
DEGREES OF ADJECTIVES
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• 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.
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• Certain adjectives have irregular forms in the comparative and superlative degrees:Irregular Comparative and Superlative Forms
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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.
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Both adverbs and adjectives in their comparative and superlative forms can be accompanied by premodifiers, single words and phrases, that intensify the degree. We were a lot more careful this time. He works a lot less carefully than the other jeweler in town.
And sometimes a set phrase, usually an informal noun phrase, is used for this purpose:
PREMODIFIERS WITH DEGREES OF ADJECTIVES
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DeterminerObservationPhysical DescriptionOriginMaterialQualifierNoun
THE ROYAL ORDER OF ADJECTIVES
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When an adjective owes its origins to a proper noun, it should probably be capitalized.
CAPITALIZING PROPER ADJECTIVES
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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.
COLLECTIVE ADJECTIVES
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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
ADJECTIVAL OPPOSITES
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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.
OTHER ADJECTIVAL CONSIDERATIONS
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•THANK YOU