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adjective| Grammatical part of speech for words that describe noun (for example, new, as in ‘a new hat’, and beautiful, as in ‘a beautiful day’). |
| Adjectives generally have three degrees (grades or levels for the description of relationships): the positive degree (new, beautiful), the comparative degree (newer, more beautiful), and the superlative degree (newest, most beautiful). |
| Some adjectives do not normally need comparative and superlative forms; one person cannot be ‘more asleep’ than someone else, a lone action is unlikely to be ‘the most single-handed action ever seen’, and many people dislike the expression ‘most unique’ or ‘almost unique’, because something unique is supposed to be the only one that exists. |
| For purposes of emphasis or style some conventions may be set aside, for example ‘I don't know who is more unique; they are both remarkable people’. |
| Double comparatives such as ‘more bigger’ are not grammatical in Standard English, but Shakespeare used a double superlative in ‘the most unkindest cut of all’. |
| Some adjectives may have both comparative and both superlative forms (commoner and more common; commonest and most common). |
| Shorter words usually take on the suffixes -er/-est but occasionally they may be given the more/most forms for emphasis or other reasons: ‘Which of them is the most clear?’. |
| When an adjective comes before a noun (as in ‘tasty food’), it is attributive; when it comes after noun and verb (as in ‘it looks good’), it is predicative. Some adjectives can only be used as a predicate (as in ‘the child was asleep’, but not ‘the asleep child’). The participle of a verb is regularly used adjectivally (as in ‘a sleeping child’, ‘boiled milk’). This is often the case in compound forms (as in ‘a quick-acting medicine’, ‘a glass-making factory’, ‘a hard-boiled egg’, ‘well-trained teachers’). |
| Adjectives are often formed by adding suffixes to nouns (sand: sandy; nation: national). |
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