[28] PREDICATIVE
a. She was devoted to her children.
11 a. She was cautious to excess.
§ 1.9 Other functions of AdjPs 121
ATTRIBUTIVE
b. *a devoted to her children mother
b. *a cautious to excess manager
There are a few post-head dependents that can occur with attributive adjectives,
though, as seen in [29].
[29] i a. The house was f2jg enough.
ii a. The result was better than expected.
iii a. It was better than anyone expected.
b. a f2jg enough house
b. a better than expected result
b. a better result than anyone expected
Enough is allowed quite generally after gradable adjectives, as in [i].
Than expected in [iib] is a short comparative complement that is permitted within
an attributive AdjP.
A longer phrase would have to be located after the head noun, as in [iiib], where
it functions as indirect complement (see Ch. 5, §4).
1.9 Other functions of AdjPs
Besides the two major functions discussed above, there are two rela
tively minor functions in which adjectives and AdjPs are found.
(a) Postpositives
Postpositive adjectives function in NP structure as post-head internal modifier.
There are three cases to consider:
[30] i everything useful somebody rich somewhere safe those responsible
ii children keen on sport a report full of errors a suggestion likely to oU-end
iii the only modification possible the ones asleep the president elect
The examples in [i] have fused determiner-heads, making it impossible for the
adjectives to occur in the usual pre-head position - compare everything useful
with every useful thing.
The modifiers in [ii] would be inadmissible in pre-head position because the adjec
tive has its own post-head dependents; the postpositive construction provides a way
of getting around the fact that such AdjPs cannot be used as attributive modifiers.
A limited number of adjectives can occur postpositively without their own
dependents and with a non-fused head noun, as in [iii]: possible can also be
attributive whereas asleep (as we have seen) cannot. Elect (meaning "recently
elected but not in office yet") is one of a very small number of exceptional adjec
tives that occur only postpositively.
(b) External modifiers
Certain forms of AdjP occur right at the beginning of the NP, before the indefinite
article a:
[31] a. [How long a delay] will there be?
ii a. It seemed [such a bargain].
b. He 'd chosen [too dark a colour].
b. [What a/ool] I was.