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Exploring English Adjectives: A Comprehensive Grammar Guide

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These notes dive into the world of adjectives—words that add color, detail, and life to our language. From basic forms to advanced usage, learn how adjectives modify nouns and enrich communication. Master their placement, degrees of comparison, and the magic of descriptive language. Whether you're aiming to improve writing or speaking, these notes provide essential tools to bring your sentences to life!

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March 15, 2025
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CHAPTER 4 : ADJECTIVES

1. DEFINITION AND CLASSFICATION:

Adjectives are words which describe or modify nouns or pronouns.

There are six main kinds of adjectives: -

(a) Demonstrative – This, that, these, those.

(b) Distributive – Each, every, either neither

(c) Quantitative – Little/a little, few, a few, some, many, much, six e.t.c

(d) Interrogative – Which, what, whose

(e) Possessive – My, your, his, her, its our, your, their

(f) Qualitative e.g. clever, dry, fat good, heavy e.t.c

We shall closely look at each of these when examining the functions of

adjectives.

2. POSITIONS OF ADJECTIVES:

The normal position of an adjective is directly before the noun it modifies.

e.g. The dirty worn out book was thrown out.

However, for stylistic reasons, adjectives may come after the noun they

modify

e.g. The book, dirty and worn out was thrown out.

When an adjective comes before the subject of the sentence (or immediately

after the subject and before the verb) we say it is attributive.

An attributive adjective comes at the subject position.

A predicative adjective is separated form the word it modifies by a verb.

e.g. The girl is fast and meticulous.

Adj

Predicative adjectives occur at the predicate position.

As observed in chapter one nouns, some words may be used as both

adjectives and pronouns.

, These include all the relative pronouns (i.e. who, that, whose, those, which),

all, another, any, both, each, either, many, more neither, one, other, several,

some, these, this, those, what, e.t.c.

e.g. Which pen do you want?

Adj.

Which do you want

Pronoun.

I want more food

Adj.

I want more

Pronoun

3. PARTICIPLES USED AS ADJECTIVES

Both present participle (verb + ing) and past participles (verb + ed) can be

used as adjectives.

e.g. Amusing incident

Tiring exercise

When they are used, they mean ‘having this effect’

Past participle adjectives (e.g. amused audience, tired students e.t.c.) are

passive and means ‘affected in this way’



Agreement of adjectives:

Adjectives in English have the same form for singular and plural; masculine

and feminine.

e.g. A good boy good boys

A good girl good girls

The only exceptions are demonstrative adjectives, this and that which take

these and those in plural nouns.
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