Gradable and Non-Gradable Adjectives
Gradable and Non-Gradable Adjectives
Gradable adjectives
Non-gradable adjectives
Gradable / non-gradable adjectives
Adjectives describe a quality that something has. Some qualities can vary in intensity or
‘grade’ while others can’t.
For example, the adjective ‘cold’ has different variations – you can be ‘very cold’ or ‘a little
cold’. The adjective ‘cold’ is gradable.
Other qualities cannot vary in intensity or grade. These adjectives show extreme, absolute
or classifying quality. For example, you can’t be ‘very freezing‘, ‘a bit boiling‘ or ‘very
married’.
via https://www.espressoenglish.net/extreme-adjectives-in-english/
Gradable adjectives
Some adjectives can be made stronger or weaker. They are gradable adjectives.
1. To show that a person or thing has more or less of a particular quality, we use grading
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adverbs like ‘very’, ‘pretty’, ‘rather’, ‘slightly‘, ‘fairly‘, ‘really‘, ‘extremely‘, etc. before
them:
Non-gradable adjectives
Some adjectives describe qualities that are completely present or completely absent. They
can’t be stronger or weaker. They are non-gradable adjectives.
1. We do not use adverbs like ‘very’, ‘pretty’, ‘rather’, ‘slightly’, ‘fairly’, ‘really’, ‘extremely‘,
etc. for non-gradable adjectives.
For example, ‘freezing‘ already means very cold. Think about the meaning of the words:
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freezing, more freezing, the most freezing
dead, deader, the deadest
nuclear, more nuclear, the most nuclear
In the first example, the adjective ‘foreign‘ is gradable because it refers to a measurable
quality, whereas in the second, ‘foreign‘ is non-gradable because it refers to a particular
type (of policy).
Some grading adverbs can also used with both gradable and non-gradable adjectives. For
example, the adverbs ‘really‘, ‘fairly‘ and ‘pretty‘:
Watch this video from Espresso English about extreme (non-gradable) adjectives:
See also:
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