1.2 Adjectives vs nouns
§ 1.2 Adjectives vs nouns 113
The properties given above make it a generally easy matter to distin
guish adjectives from nouns, especially when taken together with the properties of
nouns presented in Ch. 5, § 1.
In this section we pick out a selection of the most decisive properties that do dis
tinguish between nouns and adjectives. We use judge, size, and silk as examples of
words that occur as nouns but not as adjectives, and wise, big, and smooth as exam
ples of words that occur as adjectives but not as nouns.
(a) Inflection
Nouns typically have plural inflected forms; adjectives (in English) never do.
Conversely, many adjectives have comparative and superlative inflected forms,
but no nouns do:
[ 4 ] PLURAL FORMS WITH ·s OR ·es SUPERLATIVE FORMS WITH ·est
a. N judges sizes silks b. *judgest *sizest *silkest
ii a. ADJ *wises *bigs *smooths b. wisest biggest smoothest
Not all nouns have plural forms and not all adjectives have comparative and superla
tive forms, but where the forms do exist the difference between nouns and adjectives
is particularly clear.
(b) Determiners
Nouns take determiners as dependent but adjectives do not. Some of the determi
natives that function as determiner in NP structure, however, can also function as
modifier in AdjP structure, so in applying this test we need to select items which
cannot modify adjectives. This ca n be done by picking genitives, or the determina
tives which and some:
[5] N
ii ADJ
which judge?
*which wise?
(c) Modifiers
my llig
*my llig
some silk
* some smooth
Nouns and adjectives take different kinds of modifiers. Most importantly, NOUNS
TAKE ADJECTIVES as modifier, but adjectives don't normally take other adjectives
as modifier. Adjectives most often take adverbs. There are enormous numbers of
adjective-adverb pairs that differ just by the presence of the suffix ·ly on the adverb,
as in remarkable vs remarkably, and in those cases it is the word without the ·ly that
modifies a following noun, and the one with ·ly that modifies a following adjective,
as the examples in [6] show:
[6] i N
ii ADJ
a remarkable judge
remarkably wise
its incredible llig
incredibly llig
this wonderful silk
wonderfully smooth
Switching adjectives and adverbs makes ungrammatical phrases in every case: *a
remarkably judge, *remarkable wise, etc.