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Wiktionary:English adjectives

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Main category: English adjectives

Order of adjectives

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When multiple adjectives are used to describe something, they usually follow a specific order.[1][2][3][4][5] First, before the adjectives, any determiners and then any postdeterminers are used: articles, numerals and other limiters, e.g. the three blind mice. Then:

  1. Opinion (limiter adjectives, e.g. a real hero or a perfect idiot, and adjectives subject to subjective measure, e.g. beautiful or interesting, or that express a judgement, e.g. good, bad, costly).
  2. Size (e.g. tiny, big, extensive).
  3. Age (e.g. young, old, new, ancient, six-year-old),
    and shape (adjectives describing more detailed physical attributes than overall size, e.g. round, sharp, swollen).
    (When adjectives that express shape and age are used together, age sometimes precedes shape ("old round", "young round")[1][2][3] and shape sometimes precedes age ("round old", "round young"),[1][4][5] and authorities differ on which order they consider the default.[6])
  4. Color (e.g. white, black, pale).
  5. Origin (e.g. French, volcanic, extraterrestrial).
  6. Material (adjectives denoting what something is made of, e.g., woollen, metallic, wooden).
  7. Last, any final limiter (expressing e.g. purpose) is used after all these adjectives, directly before the described noun, as in vehicular homicide. Such limiters are often other nouns used attributively, rather than adjectives, and may even be indelible parts of a compound noun, as in rocking chair, passenger car, hunting cabin, book cover.

Hence, one would usually say "one (quantity) nice (opinion) little (size) old (age) round (shape) [or round old] white (color) wooden (material) house", not e.g. *"...wooden nice white little house". However, this order is not absolute. In particular:

  • Any adjective can be fronted, e.g. when contrasting two things: "use the white round wooden shield, not the blue one!"
  • Some adjectives borrowed from French follow the noun they modify (as postmodifiers, postpositive adjectives), e.g. time immemorial. Adjectives may even change meaning depending on whether they precede or follow, as in they live in a proper town, not a village vs. they live in the town proper, not the suburbs.
  • Some other set phrases do not follow this order ("the big bad wolf", not *"the bad big wolf"). (In some cases, this may be due to the ablaut reduplication rule that high vowels precede low vowels.)

When several adjectives of the same type are used together, they are usually ordered from general to specific, like "old medieval castle" or "lovely intelligent person".[1]

Tests of whether an English word is an adjective

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Wiktionary classifies words according to their part(s) of speech. In many cases, a word's part of speech is obvious. In cases where a word's part of speech is not clear, we use these generally accepted tests to help determine whether the word is an adjective. If a word meets these tests, it is likely to be an adjective, but it may not be; and conversely, if a word does not meet these tests, it is unlikely to be an adjective, but it may be. Some tests are correlated: a prepositional phrase modified by "very" is more likely to appear in attributive position. In cases where word has multiple definitions, the tests may have to be applied to each definition.

  1. Modification by adverbs: very ___, too ___
    Does it get modified by the adverbs very or too?
    • Most adjectives and adverbs regularly do, as do some determiners that double as adjectives: "very/too trustworthy" (adjective), "very/too continuously" (adverb), "very/too fast" (adjective and adverb), "very/too many" (adjective and determiner).
    • Other adjectival and adverbial words and phrases (prepositional phrases, nouns and proper nouns, participles, etc.) sometimes do this, but that's usually rare and a bit awkward; it indicates that the word or phrase is being stretched into use as an adjective or adverb, and if it becomes common, that's good evidence that the word or phrase has actually become an adjective or adverb, at least for some speakers.
  2. Comparative and superlative forms: more ___, most ___; ___er, ___est
    Does it form a comparative and superlative, either with more/most or with -er/-est?
    • As above, most adjectives and adverbs do this regularly, as do some determiners that double as adjectives: "more/most awesome" (adjective), "more/most redundantly" (adverb), "bigger/biggest" (adjective), "easier/easiest" (adjective and adverb), "fewer/fewest" (adjective and determiner). The "-er/-est" forms are good evidence that the word is an adjective; adverbs usually use "more/most" unless they double as adjectives ("faster", "easier", "higher", etc.).
    • As above, other adjectival and adverbial words and phrases sometimes do this, but that's usually rare and a bit awkward.
    • Some caution is required in applying this test, since "more" and "most" are also determiners (as in "more/most people", "more/most food"); and even as adverbs, they (especially "more") have other, similar uses that are not specific to adjectives and adverbs: in "more boy than man", for example, "boy" and "man" are nouns.
  3. Use after forms of "become"
    Does it get used after forms of become?
    • Most adjective and noun phrases (i.e., phrases headed by adjectives or nouns) do this regularly: "became angry" (adjective), "became an adult" (arthrous countable noun), "became mayor" (anarthrous countable noun), "became rock" (uncountable noun).
    • Other nominals (noun-like words and phrases) do this sometimes as well: "the singing became dancing, the dancing became rioting" (gerund).
    • Most other adjectivals avoid "become" (?"she became in the know", ?"they became yelling").
    • Some other predicative verbs are like "become", being used often with adjective phrases but not so much with other adjectivals; however, some predicative verbs take a range of adjectivals. It depends very much on the verb.
  4. Use in attributive position
    Does it precede nouns, modifying them?
    • Most bare adjectives, bare nouns, and proper nouns do: "big dog" (adjective), "math test" (noun), "U.S. exports" (proper noun). Some bare adjectives follow their nouns, however, as in "attorney general" (these are generally French-derived words).
    • Adjective phrases that end with the adjective usually do, while adjective phrases that start with the adjective usually do not, unless they can be split to surround the noun: "amazingly, unbelievably big dog" (adjective phrase), "bigger dog than I expected" (adjective phrase surrounding the noun), "dog worth $1000" (adjective phrase following the noun; *"worth dog $1000" is ungrammatical).
    • As with the "very/too" and "more/most" tests, most other adjectivals do this rarely and awkwardly, and usually are joined with hyphens when they do: "a twenty-four-year-old, willing-to-work-hard, down-on-his-luck gentleman".
    • Determiners such as "many", "most", "few", "all", and so on may seem to do this. Linguists distinguish between determiners, which specify, and adjectives, which modify (though terminology varies somewhat), but in specific cases it is not always obvious which one is involved.
  5. Use in predicative position
    Can it be linked to a noun or pronoun with a copula?
    Note that forms of be can be used not just as copulas but also as auxiliary verbs together with participles, both present and past.
    • Most adjectives can: "That house is big", "That dog is male."
    • Uncountable and plural nouns can be used in this position as well: "Her snack is fruit."
  6. Use with an implied noun
    Is it used alone, with an implied noun?
    • Nouns and proper nouns are, obviously.
    • Almost all determiners are, frequently: "these", "all".
    • Adjectives and participles are, sometimes: "Give me your tired, your poor, / [] / Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, / [] " (from "The New Colossus").
    • Other adjectivals usually are not.
  7. Requirement for a predicand
    "Adjectives cannot head clause-initial phrases unless they are related to a predicand, whereas prepositions can"[7]. (To this, we must add the qualifier typically, since Wiktionary currently rejects the CGEL's analysis of intransitive prepositions.) Consider these examples with absent in adjunct function:
    1. Absent from the household, Tinkerbell, Paris's famous Chihuahua, was missed. (Adj)
    2. ?Absent from the household, Paris sat in her room missing Tinkerbell. (Adj)
    3. *Absent from the household, there was no dog. (Adj)
    4. Absent the upper classes, many people would be much happier. (Prep)
    5. Absent the upper classes, there would be fewer wars and less crime. (Prep)
    In 1, Tinkerbell, the subject of the sentence is the predicand, and is thus said to be absent. In 2, the subject and natural predicand is Paris, though we can figure out that the intended predicand was likely Tinkerbell. In 3, the subject of the sentence is the dummy pronoun there, which cannot be a predicand. This causes the sentence to be ungrammatical. In 4, and 5, however, absent is a preposition, not an adjective, and no predicand is needed. Thus, when no predicand is available, as in 5, the sentence remains grammatical. Note that 4 does not assert that "many people are absent the upper classes," so that even when there is a likely subject, it doesn't function as a predicand when the adjunct is prepositional.
    This is not to say that prepositional phrases cannot have a predicand, as the following example illustrates (the predicand is underlined).
    A world absent the upper classes would have fewer wars and less crime.
  8. Base for formation of adverbs with -ly
    If a word can form an adverb by the addition of the suffix -ly, it is at least suggestive that the word is an adjective. This can be a useful screening test for deverbal words ending in ed or ing. This is not definitive. As a test it generates both false positives and false negatives. Consider swimming and swimmingly. Swimming does not meet most tests for being an adjective. Conversely, many adjectives ending in ing have adjective senses that are somewhat distinguishable from the senses of the corresponding verb and participle, but do not readily form adverbs with -ly. Consider a sitting judge and *sittingly.
  9. Existence as an adjective predating use as a noun, etc
    If a word was at first used or regarded exclusively as an adjective, and only later came to be used as a noun (etc), it may be considered an adjective even if adjectival uses could now be reinterpreted as attributive uses of the noun. (This is the "aliquot" test; compare the "jiffy" test.)
  10. Distinct meaning
    If a word has distinct meaning when used as an adjective that is not borne when it is used as another part of speech, it should be considered as adjective. This may include a current meaning derived from a now-obsolete meaning when used as another part of speech. This is particularly relevant for present and past participles.

Distinguishing adjectives from other parts of speech

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Not all of these tests are necessary or sufficient conditions to warrant an English adjective part-of-speech section in Wiktionary. Furthermore, some are only effective in distinguishing adjectives from certain other parts of speech, not all others. Following are the rules most likely to be useful in distinguishing use of a word as an adjective from use as another part of speech.

From all other parts of speech
Necessary conditions
  1. 4 above. Use in attributive position
Sufficient conditions
  1. 10 above. Distinct meaning
From nouns (also see gerunds below)

The most common cases requiring careful determination of 'part of speech' or 'traditional word class' are those involving use of a word that is a noun, but may also have use as a true adjective.

Sufficient conditions
  1. 1 above. Modification by adverbial very or too
  2. 2 above. Existence of comparative or superlative forms
  3. 9 above. Existence as adjective prior to use as a noun or other 'part of speech'
From prepositions
Sufficient condition
  1. 7 above. Requirement for a predicand
  2. 9 above. Existence as adjective prior to use as another 'part of speech'
From past participles
Sufficient conditions
  1. 1 above. Modification by adverbial very or too
  2. 2 above. Existence of comparative or superlative forms
  3. 8 above. Use a base of adverbs ending in -ly
  4. 9 above. Existence as adjective prior to use as another 'part of speech'
From present participles
Sufficient conditions
  1. 1 above. Modification by adverbial very or too
  2. 2 above. Existence of comparative (-er) or superlative forms (-est)
  3. 3 above. Use after forms of become
  4. 9 above. Existence as adjective prior to use as another 'part of speech'
From gerunds
Sufficient conditions
  1. 1 above. Modification by adverbial very or too
  2. 2 above. Existence of comparative (-er) or superlative forms (-est)
  3. 9 above. Existence as adjective prior to use as another 'part of speech'

Potential false friends

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Common cases include words that are present and past participles, nouns, and certain adverbs which are sometimes used in ways that make them like adjectives. There are also words that are classified as determiners that superficially may seem like adjectives. They should be looked up because there are relatively few of them and that class does not readily admit new members.

Words ending in -ing

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Such words are usually present participles or words descended from them. Sometimes, present participles do become true adjectives.

For an example analysis, consider "a reddening sky". "Reddening" is modifying a noun in attributive position (test 4), so one might think it an adjective. "Reddening" appears 159 times in COCA, a 400 million word corpus of US English usage. In none of those uses does it appear after "too" or "very" (test 1), "more" or "most" (test 2), or forms of "become" (test 3). Not looking much like an adjective.

To confirm this one could try the same tests at Google Books, Google News, Google Scholar, and Usenet. These searches take more time to do properly but can find older and more unusual uses not found in other corpora. For example, a search for "too-reddening" at Google Books provides eight apparent uses. Of these, one is not accessible and seven have "too" separate from "reddening" by a comma. A search for "very-reddening" finds three uses. A search for use after forms of become finds two possible uses. But one is inaccessible and the other seems to involve the use of reddening not as an adjective, but as a gerund (nominal) complement of "dependent" ("reddening dependent" = "dependent upon reddening"). The search for comparative forms following "more" and "most" generates 316 uses. The first page shows at least one probable qualifying use and 9 uses of "reddening" as a noun. The other 316 are left as an exercise for the reader. Also the possibilities of usage at News, Scholar, or Usenet.

None of the references works at OneLook.com[2] show reddening being defined as an adjective, including Wiktionary. However, OED has adjective entries for reddening, swimming, flying, walking, talking, building, creating, pulling, sleeping, spinning (multiple senses), marrying (2 senses), cleaning and growing; a random look suggests it generously covers -ing forms as adjectives.

The ambiguity that remains is typical of the cases that need to be investigated at Wiktionary.

An example -ing form treated as an adjective beyond participle is interesting: it is modified by "more" and "very" and is treated as an adjective by Merriam-Webster, AHD, Macmillan, Collins, and Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Other examples defined by multiple OneLook dictionaries as adjectives include pleasing, disgusting, annoying, infuriating, frustrating, maddening, convincing, crying, flying, refreshing, binding, tiring, boiling, flowing, leading, loving, painstaking, caring, abiding, enduring, lasting, continuing, and happening.

Attributive uses of -ing forms that are gerunds or nouns are not considered to be separate adjectives: swimming in swimming pool is an attributively used noun or gerund, and so is fishing in fishing rod.

-ing forms prefixed with un- and non- are treated as adjectives.

See also Appendix:English gerund-participles.

Words ending in -ed

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Such words are usually past participles or words descended from them. The descendants are often adjectives. Consider "The fined company appealed, lost, and paid the fine." The same tests apply. Nothing to help the word meet the three other tests can be found at COCA. The other sources are left as an exercise for the reader.

An interesting case is one where the -ed word can define a static state. In such a case it might be argued that the -ed form is then being used as an adjective rather than as a component of a passive. "Fined" is not readily considered a static state. But "opened" often is. "The window was opened (also "open") to let in the breeze." "The sky was reddened." could be interpreted that way, though "The sky was reddened by the setting sun." could not.

Many words ending in -ed are formed from nouns and very many of these are adjectives. For example, armed is derived from arm and has various meanings including "having weapons", "having arm-like limbs".

Words ending in -ly

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Most words ending in -ly are adverbs, but some are not. For example, "comely" and "ungainly" are adjectives.

Words that are also nouns

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Consider "angel dust". Is "angel" an adjective? A native speaker might not even bother testing. But what about "work team"? Is "work" an adjective? It is easy to find "it became work", so 2 tests are met. One will not find authentic examples of "too work" and "very work". The instances of "more work" or even "more work than" will be cases where "work" can be shown to be a noun.

Contrast these with "plastic" as in "plastic pipe". "plastic#Noun" is also a noun. One can readily find "too plastic", "very plastic", and "more plastic than", and "become plastic". But the meaning of "plastic" as an adjective in this differs from the "plastic pipe" meaning.

Etymologies

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{{suffix}} is often useful for adjectives actually formed in English since about 1500. But many adjectives were formed earlier in Middle English or Old English or came to English from other languages, especially French (Modern, Middle, Old, or Anglo-Norman), Dutch, and German; {{suffix}} is often used for these, but its use is somewhat controversial. A little investigation should reveal the etymology. If no dictionary shows an etymology, the word can be assumed to have been formed in Modern English.

Adjectives that are identical in form to nouns or participles of verbs can be assumed to be derived from them. This does not need to be shown, but there may be exceptional cases.

Defining adjectives

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Adjective definitions fall into two types: synonyms or phrasal definitions.

Synonyms

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For obsolete, archaic, rare, dialect, and slang words it is sometimes sufficient to define by a single contemporary synonym.

Phrasal definitions

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For other adjectives, it is better to define with a phrase. Often an adjective is defined relative to a related word that is another part of speech, almost always a noun or verb.

Certain words are commonly used to begin the definitions of adjectives:

  • able to
  • apt to
  • associated with
  • being
  • belonging to
  • capable of
  • characterized by
  • consisting of
  • denoting
  • describing
  • designating
  • exhibiting
  • expressing
  • for
  • full of
  • having
  • having the quality of
  • having to do with
  • inclined to
  • indicating
  • involving
  • like
  • likely to
  • made of
  • marked by
  • of
  • of the nature of
  • pertaining to
  • producing
  • relating to
  • showing
  • tending to
  • used for
  • used with
  • used in
  • used to

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Order of adjectives, British Council.
  2. 2.0 2.1 R.M.W. Dixon, "Where Have all the Adjectives Gone?" Studies in Language 1, no. 1 (1977): 19–80.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Dowling, Tim (2016 September 13) “Order force: the old grammar rule we all obey without realising”, in The Guardian[1], The Guardian
  4. 4.0 4.1 Adjectives: order (from English Grammar Today), in the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary online
  5. 5.0 5.1 R. Declerck, A Comprehensive Descriptive Grammar of English (1991), page 350: "When there are several descriptive adjectives, they normally occur in the following order: characteristic — size — shape — age — colour — [...]"
  6. ^ Compare: Google Books Ngram Viewer finds "old round" more common than "round old", but "round young" more common than "young round".
  7. ^ CGEL, page 531