A Student's Introduction to English Grammar

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(^114) Chapter 6 Adjectives and adverbs


(d) Function


The attributive and predicative uses of adjectives do not provide a good test for dis­
tinguishing them from nouns because nouns can also function as attributive modi­
fiers or predicative complements. But there is a function-based test that separates
nouns from adjectives fairly well: the ability of nouns to head phrases in subject
and object position. We illustrate in [7].


[7]
N
ii ADJ

SUBJECT
The judge arrived.
*Wise arrived.

Overlap between the categories


SUBJECT
Its sjzg amazed me.
* f1jg amazed me.

OBJECT
I like silk.
*1 like smooth.

It should be borne in mind that there are a good many lexemes that belong to both
noun and adjective categories. They have the positive properties of both. One exam­
ple is cold:


'.. it can be an adjective denoting a low temperature (This soup is cold);
It can also be a noun denoting a minor illness (I caught a bad cold).

Compare, then:


[8]
INFLECTION
11 DETERMINERS
1lI MODIFIERS
iv FUNCTION

ADJECTIVE
colder, coldest

terribly cold

NOUN
colds
my cold, which cold?
a terrible cold
The cold was nasty. Don't catch a cold.

", The adjective has comparative and superlative forms while the noun has a plural.
,. The noun takes determiners as dependent.
The modifier contrast is evident in [iii], with the adjective taking an adverb and
the noun an adjective as modifier.
The noun occurs as head of a phrase in subject or object function.


The fused modifier-head constructi on


One complication in distinguishing between adjectives and nouns is that a limited
range of adjectives can appear as fused modifier-head in an NP, as described in
Ch. 5, §7. Further examples are given in [9].


[9] SIMPLE
11 PARTITIVE
III SPECIAL


Thefirst version wasn't very good but [the second] was fine.
I couldn 't afford [even the cheapest of them J.
Th is tax cut will benefit [only the rich).

Precisely because they are in head position in NP structure, the underlined words
might at first glance be thought to be nouns. But they're not nouns: they're adjec­
tives. In the simple and partitive constructions this is fairly easy to see:


Note the possibility of adding a repetition of the noun version in [i].
In [ii] we have a superlative form, cheapest, which certainly can't be a noun.
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