Adjective
In
the
English
language,
an
adjective
is
a
part
of
speech
which
can
be
thought
of
as
a
"describing
word".
An
adjective
modifies
a
noun
in
a
similar
way
to
a
determiner.
In
some
sentences,
past
participles
are
used
as
adjectives.
In
the
examples,
the
adjective
is
highlighted
in
bold.
- It
is
a
cold
day.
- He
is
a
kind
man.
- I
like
blue
sky.
- The
sky
is
blue.
- The
joke
she
told
was
so
funny,
I
could
not
stop
laughing
all
day.
- He
went
mad.
In
the
first
set
of
examples
the
adjective
simply
describes
a
noun.
In
the
later
examples
the
adjective
forms
a
predicate.
Some
adjectives
in
English,
such
as
"my"
or
"bonkers"
can
not
be
used
both
ways.
In
English,
adjectives
come
before
the
noun
they
describe.
In
French,
they
usually
come
after
the
noun.
An
adjectival
phrase
is
a
phrase
with
an
adjective
as
its
head.
(e.g.
full
of
toys)
.
Adjectival
phrases
may
occur
as
premodifiers
to
a
noun
(a
bin
full
of
toys),
or
as
predicatives
to
a
verb.
(the
bin
is
full
of
toys.)
Comparison
of
adjectives
Many
adjectives
have
comparative
and
superlative
forms.
In
English
grammar,
these
are
formed
in
one
of
two
ways:
either
by
suffixes
(big,
bigger,
biggest)
or
by
the
use
of
the
grammatical
particles
more
and
most.
Some
adjectives
in
English
have
suppletive
forms
in
their
comparison,
such
as
good,
better,
best.
Which
English
adjectives
are
compared
by
which
means
is
a
complex
matter
of
English
idiom.
Generally,
shorter
adjectives,
Anglo-Saxon
words,
and
shorter,
fully
domesticated
French
words
(e.g.
noble)
use
the
suffixes.
Longer
words,
especially
those
derived
from
Greek
and
Latin,
require
more
and
most.
A
fair
number
of
words,
especially
longer
adjectives
that
end
in
Anglo-Saxon
derivative
suffixes
like
-ly,
can
take
either
form.
Grammatical
prescriptivists
frequently
object
to
phrases
such
as
more
perfect,
on
the
grounds
that
being
perfect
is
a
quality
that
by
definition
admits
to
no
comparison.
Most
speakers
of
English
understand
the
phrase
to
mean
more
nearly
perfect,
however,
and
dismiss
the
prescriptivists'
objection
as
pedantry.
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