A Student's Introduction to English Grammar

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120 Chapter 6 Adjectives and adverbs

1.8 Adjectives restricted to attributive or predicative function


Although most adjectives can be used both attributively and predicatively,
there are nevertheless many that are restricted to one or other of these two uses:

[24 ] ATTRIBUTIVE USE PREDICATIVE USE
a. a huUe hole
ii a. utter nonsense
iii a. *the asleep children

b. The hole was huUe.
b. *That nonsense was utter.
b. The children were asleep.
Huge illustrates the default case, where the adjective appears both attributively
and predicatively.
Utter is an exceptional case: an attributive-only adjective, which can't be used
predicatively (as shown in [iib)).
Asleep is the opposite kind of exception, as evident from [iii]; it can occur pred­
icatively but not attributively: it is a never-attributive adjective.

(a) Attributive-only adjectives


NPs containing a sample of other adjectives that are attributive-only are given in [25]:

[25] these damn budget cuts
our future prospects
the only drawback
the putative fa ther

the eventual winner
the main problem
their own fa ult
the sole survivor

(b) Never-attributive adjectives


her former husband
a mere child
the principal advantage
a veritable jungle

Here are some further examples of predicative uses of never-attributive adjectives:

[26] The house was ablaze.
Something was amiss.
It is liable to flood.

The boy seemed afraid.
It was devoid of interest.
The baby looked content.

Restrictions may apply to senses rather than lexemes


The child was alone.
Corruption was rik..
I was utterly bereft.

As with the gradable vs non-gradable distinction, the restrictions often apply just
to certain senses of a lexeme. In [27], for example, it is ONLY IN THE SENSES
ILLUSTRATED that the underlined adjectives in [i] are attributive-only, and those in
[ii] never-attributive:


[2 7] i a certain country
ii I fe el fa int

the late queen
He was Ulad to see her.

Structural restrictions on attributive adjectives


the lawful heir
I'm sorry you missed it.

Attributive AdjPs mostly cannot contain dependents that follow the head. The typi­
cal case is as in [2 8], where the underlined adjective licenses a post-head dependent
(double-underlined), and the AdjP is allowed only predicatively as in the [a] cases,
not attributively as in the [b] cases.

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