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Examples:
He washed the empty cup.
"Empty" is an attributive adjective, as it is placed
directly beside the noun "cup." It is describing the cup.
The chatter made the room noisy.
This is an instance in which the attributive adjective
appears directly behind the noun. "Noisy" is describing the
"room."
o Predicate Adjectives:
Adjectives which appear after a linking verb (see Lesson 1.3b) are
called predicative, because they form part of the predicate. They modify the
subject of the sentence or clause (a clause is a portion of a sentence which
contains a subject and a predicate).
For information on subjects and predicates, see Lesson 2.1.
Examples:
The painting was
noun:
linking verb:
adjective:
noun"painting")
colourful.
painting
was
colourful (describing the
adjective:
2.
3. Limiting adjectives do as their name suggests, they limit the noun being described.
There are nine types of limiting adjectives.
The Nine Types of Limiting Adjectives:
1. Definite & Indefinite Articles
2. Possessive Adjectives
3. Demonstrative Adjectives
4. Indefinite Adjectives
5. Interrogative Adjectives
6. Cardinal Adjectives
7. Ordinal Adjectives
8. Proper Adjectives
9. Nouns used as Adjectives
There are two indefinite articles, a and an. These are used with a noun when a
specific noun is not being pointed at.
Examples:
a dog (any dog)
an apple (any apple)
2. Possessive Adjectives:
The possessive adjectives my, your, his, her, its, our, and their modify nouns by
showing possession or ownership.
Examples:
my sweater
their party
3. Demonstrative Adjectives:
A demonstrative adjective is a demonstrative pronoun that appears before a noun and
emphasizes it.
Example: (note the difference)
demonstrative pronoun:
These are wonderful.
demonstrative adjective: These apples are wonderful.
4. Indefinite Adjectives:
Indefinite adjectives are indefinite pronouns used before a noun.
Example: (note the difference)
pronoun:
Several witnessed the event.
adjective: Several pedestrians witnessed the event.
5. Interrogative Adjectives:
The interrogative adjectives what, which, and whose modify nouns and pronouns to
indicate a question about them.
Example: (note the difference)
pronoun:
Which fell?
adjective: Which trapeze artist fell?
6. Cardinal Adjectives:
Adjectives that modify the noun by numbering it (stating how many) are cardinal
adjectives.
Examples:
five books
two fish
7. Ordinal Adjectives:
8. Proper Adjectives:
Adjectives derived from proper names are called proper adjectives. They are easily
recognizable in that they are always capitalized.
Examples:
French bread
Shakespearean sonnet