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  Encyclopedia of Keywords > Noun > Adjective   Michael Charnine

Keywords and Sections
EXPRESS
COMPARISON
SUPERLATIVE FORM
SOMETHING
ADJECTIVE PHRASES
HEAD
GENERAL TERM
BACK TEETH
THINGS RELATED
PHILATELY
INFLECTED
NUMBER
SUPERLATIVE ADJECTIVE
QUALITY
PARADIGM
ATTRIBUTE
ANARCHISM
DECLENSION
IMPLIED
ARTICLE
ROOT
MEANS
FUNCTIONING
MODIFIED
ETC
IRONY
RELATING
GRAMMAR
SUPERLATIVE DEGREE
SPEECH
LANGUAGE
TERM
ENGLISH LANGUAGE
DESCRIBING
PRONOUNS
SLOVENE
FUNCTION
ADJECTIVAL
LANGUAGES
FUNCTIONS
PARTICIPIAL PHRASE
CASE
UNDERLYING FIELD
BASE FORM
TANNIN CONTENT
PREDICATE ADJECTIVE
Review of Short Phrases and Links

    This Review contains major "Adjective"- related terms, short phrases and links grouped together in the form of Encyclopedia article. Please click on Move Up to move good phrases up.

Definitions Submit/More Info Add a definition

  1. As an adjective, the word is used in expressions like "Viking age," "Viking culture," "Viking colony," etc., generally referring to medieval Scandinavia. (Web site)
  2. An adjective is a part of speech which modifies a noun, usually describing it or making its meaning more specific. Move Up
  3. An adjective is periphrastic if it can form its comparative with "more" and its superlative with "most". Move Up
  4. An adjective is used predicatively when a verb separates it from the noun or pronoun it describes: The umpire was wrong. Move Up
  5. An Adjective is a word which qualifies a noun, that is, which shows some distinguishing mark or characteristic belonging to the noun. (Web site) Move Up

Express Submit/More Info Add phrase and link

  1. ADJECTIVES 12. A word used with a noun (expressed or understood) to express a quality or characteristic is called an adjective. (Web site)
  2. It is also very common with adjectives to express the object toward which the quality denoted by the adjective is directed. (Web site) Move Up

Comparison Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The comparative degree of a adjective is used when a comparison is made between two persons or things.
  2. Many of the great writers have played havoc with the adjective in the indiscriminate use of the degrees of comparison. (Web site) Move Up

Superlative Form Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. These adjectives can still be changed to the comparative and superlative form (adjective nature).

Something Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. A participle can be used as an adjective to modify a noun or assert something about it.

Adjective Phrases Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Adjective phrases are the most frequent and considered the most prototypical grammatical form that function as noun phrase modifiers.

Head Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Usually noun phrases, verb phrases and adjective phrases belong to endocentric types because the constituent items are subordinate to the head.

General Term Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. A general term used either as a noun or adjective to identify ESP or PK. (rhine.org) psiology Pop term for parapsychology.

Back Teeth Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. An adjective used to describe things pertaining to the back of your mouth or your back teeth.

Things Related Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Meaning of the word Also see: Armed forces As an adjective, "military" is a descriptive property of things related to soldiers and warfare.

Philately Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The name came from author Fred Melville's work "Phantom Philately." 65 Philatelic 0 English (Fil-a-tel-ic) The adjective for philately.

Inflected Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Since the comparative adjective is still an adjective, it must be inflected to agree with the noun it modifies.
  2. When an adjective is inflected, it usually takes the ending -e and a series of morphological changes may result. Move Up

Number Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The adjective must agree with the word that it qualifies in both gender and number.
  2. The absolute superlative is normally formed by modifying the adjective by adding -ísimo, -ísima, -ísimos or -ísimas, depending on the gender or number. Move Up
  3. It has an obvious identification with the present day Macedonian adjective "milo" (dear), from which a number of names are (Milosh, Milko, Milka). (Web site) Move Up

Superlative Adjective Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Since the superlative adjective is still an adjective, it must be inflected to agree with the noun it modifies.
  2. When a comparison is made between two people or things we use the comparative adjective, and not the superlative adjective. Move Up
  3. Most should be tagged as a superlative adjective (JJS) even when it occurs without a head noun, as in most of the time. Move Up

Quality Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The superlative is the form of an adjective or adverb that expresses the highest or a very high degree of the quality of what is being described.
  2. Superlative Adjectives A superlative adjective expresses the highest degree of a quality. (Web site) Move Up
  3. We use a superlative adjective to describe the degree of a quality of one thing in a group of things. (Web site) Move Up

Paradigm Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. What dictates the choice of the paradigm for the adjective is the type of element in the determiner position in the phrase. (Web site)

Attribute Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Attributive function implies that the adjective refers to an attribute of the noun referent. (Web site)

Anarchism Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. One contemporary anarchist without adjectives is Fred Woodworth, who says: "I have no prefix or adjective for my anarchism.

Declension Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Unusual in other language families, declension in most Slavic languages also depends on whether the word is a noun or an adjective.

Implied Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The implied object makes volente more like a verb, which can take an object, rather than like an adjective that simply modifies a noun. (Web site)
  2. I thought Persian was implied by those nouns through the adjective, but I could be wrong. Move Up

Article Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. For the comparative superlative they use the words "mais" and "più" between the article and the adjective, like "most" in English. (Web site)
  2. Attributive: A participle with an article in the attributive position functions as an adjective. (Web site) Move Up
  3. When used without an adjective, "international law" generally refers to "public international law", and this article concentrates on that meaning. (Web site) Move Up

Root Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The declension of adjectives, just like nouns, depends on whether the root of the adjective ends with a consonant or a vowel.
  2. However, the zero-derived form of any root is either: (a) an adjective, or (b) a verb. (Web site) Move Up
  3. The uninflected basic positive form is equal to the root of the adjective. (Web site) Move Up

Means Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. MUST This word, or the adjective "required", means that the definition is an absolute requirement of the specification.
  2. Alternate (as an adjective) traditionally means going back and forth between two things, as in alternate Mondays (i.e., every other Monday). Move Up
  3. In anatomy, lumbar is an adjective that means of or pertaining to the abdominal segment of the torso, between the diaphragm and the sacrum (pelvis). Move Up

Functioning Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. NOTE: With the usage of the compound tenses, the past participle is functioning as a past participle, and should not be treated as an adjective. (Web site)
  2. When a participle is part of a verb phrase, the participle is not functioning as an adjective. Move Up
  3. The head noun, rather than the genitive, is functioning (in sense) as an attributive adjective. Move Up

Modified Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. An adjective can be modified by an adverb, or by a phrase or clause functioning as an adverb. (Web site)
  2. Furthermore, an adjective in OE had to correspond (or, as grammarians say, agree) in case with the noun it modified. (Web site) Move Up
  3. Like a noun the gerund can be modified by a noun in the possessive case or by a possessive adjective: I wonder at his keeping calm. (Web site) Move Up

Etc Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The adjective performs the functions of the attribute and the predicative, etc.

Irony Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Cheeky Demonstrating the British love of irony, adjective applied to former midfield clogger Dennis Wise.

Relating Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Elfin Elf"in (-ĭn) adjective Relating to elves. (Web site)
  2. Of, relating to, or functioning as an adjective. Move Up

Grammar Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In grammar, an adjective is a word whose main syntactic role is to modify a noun or pronoun, giving more information about the noun or pronoun's referent.
  2. Grammar Of, relating to, or being the simple uncompared degree of an adjective or adverb, as opposed to either the comparative or superlative. Move Up

Superlative Degree Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Comparative degree is expressed by plus or minus preceding the adjective and superlative degree by le plus or le minus. (Web site)

Speech Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. An adverb is a part of speech that describes or modifies a verb, an adjective, another adverb, clause, or sentence.
  2. If a word modifies a noun or pronoun, it is an adjective, even if that word is usually associated with a different part of speech. (Web site) Move Up
  3. Adjective and a list of adjectives: parts of speech from. Move Up

Language Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In English, the term Spanish relates more to the language than to the nation; the noun and adjective used today for people from Spain is Spaniard.
  2. As in English, the inflectional grammar of the language (e.g., adjective and noun endings) has simplified over time. (Web site) Move Up
  3. The proper adjective is "Rihan", thus this must be used in referring to the language - the Rihan language. (Web site) Move Up

Term Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The term "deadpan" first emerged as an adjective or adverb in the 1920s, as a compound word combining "dead" and "pan" (a slang term for the face). (Web site)
  2. The adjective "beat" was introduced to the group by Herbert Huncke, though Kerouac expanded the meaning of the term. Move Up
  3. This term can also be used in a relative sense, considering "noble" as an adjective for the word "metal". Move Up

English Language Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In Oriya morphology, there are no adjective and adverb inflections like the comparative (-er) and superlative (-est) of English language.
  2. The following article explains three functions of adjectives and adjective phrases in the English language that students must learn. Move Up

Describing Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. An adjective describing a person or thing ordinarily comes after the noun in Spanish, not before the noun as in English.
  2. Accordingly, the word "organic" is an adjective describing a method of farming that uses natural, whole systems designs. (Web site) Move Up
  3. In grammar, an adjective is a part of speech that modifies a noun or a pronoun, usually by describing it or making its meaning more specific. Move Up

Pronouns Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Object complements are defined as nouns, pronouns, noun phrases, adjectives, and adjective phrases that directly follow and modify the direct object.
  2. The noun is usually preceded by adjective, prepositions, pronouns, articles and is followed by the verb. (Web site) Move Up
  3. The Gerundive is a verbal adjective in -ndus and as such is used in agreement with substantives and pronouns. (Web site) Move Up

Slovene Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The adverb in Slovene is always the same as the singular neuter form of any given adjective if derived from an adjective.

Function Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. However, if the adverb can also function as an adjective, then a hyphen may be required for clarity.
  2. Of the two, the more specific function of the adjective is that of an attribute, since the function of a predicative can be performed by the noun as well. (Web site) Move Up
  3. Grammatically, a past participle can function as a participle when accompanying the verb HABER, and as an adjective in all other uses. (Web site) Move Up

Adjectival Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In Ukrainian, an adverb is formed by removing the adjectival suffices "-ий" "-а" or "-е" from an adjective, and replacing them with the adverbial "-о". (Web site)
  2. However, although the genitive is primarily adjectival in force, it is more emphatic than a simple adjective would be. (Web site) Move Up

Languages Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In some languages particularly Slavic, there may also be different endings depending on whether the word is a noun or an adjective.
  2. The correct American English adjective for the language, people, and culture of Slovakia is 'Slovak;' Slovak belongs to the 'Slavic' group of languages. Move Up
  3. The term Celtic as a noun means the family of languages but as an adjective it has the meaning "of the Celts" or "in the style of the Celts". Move Up

Functions Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. It often functions as an adjective or adverb, but it can function as a noun as well. (Web site)
  2. A clause that cannot stand alone as a full sentence and functions as a noun, adjective, or adverb within a sentence. (Web site) Move Up
  3. A participle is a verbal ending in -ing (present) or -ed, -en, -d, -t, or -n (past) that functions as an adjective, modifying a noun or pronoun. (Web site) Move Up

Participial Phrase Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. It functions as an adjective or as the verb in a participial phrase. (Web site)
  2. The past participle is used as an participial adjective, in a participial phrase, in the passive voice, or in the perfect tenses. Move Up

Case Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. An adjective can usually be treated as a noun or pronoun, in which case it can also be inflected. (Web site)
  2. Adjectives are either placed between the article and noun or after the noun, in which case the article is repeated before the adjective. (Web site) Move Up
  3. There's also this case with an adjective: iso -- isotella "big -- to talk big", or feikkailla < English fake "to be fake, blatantly and consistently". (Web site) Move Up

Underlying Field Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In mathematics, real is used as an adjective, meaning that the underlying field is the field of real numbers.
  2. In mathematics, the adjective rational often means that the underlying field considered is the field Q of rational numbers. (Web site) Move Up

Base Form Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. This field contains the base form of the verb or adjective of which the noun is a nominalization.
  2. Comparative and superlative forms apply only to the base form of the adjective (e.g. Move Up

Tannin Content Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Sometimes combined with the adjective "brawny" to characterize a young red wine with high alcohol and tannin content. (Web site)

Predicate Adjective Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. These are used to stand for the possessor of another noun — one that is used as a determiner, and one that is used as a pronoun or a predicate adjective.
  2. The verbs that can be completed by predicate adjective s are called being verbs or copulative verbs. Move Up

Categories Submit/More Info

  1. Noun
  2. Adjectives Move Up
  3. Languages > Language > Grammar > Verb Move Up
  4. Phrase Move Up
  5. Encyclopedia of Keywords > Time > History > Word Move Up

Related Keywords

    * Adjectival Phrase * Adjectives * Adjective Meaning * Adjective Phrase * Adverb * Adverbs * Attributive Adjective * Attributive Adjectives * Clause * Comparative Form * Complement * Compound Nouns * Definite Article * Determiner * English * Feminine * Form * Gender * Gerund * Indefinite Article * Infinitive * Intransitive Verb * Latin * Madagascar * Malagasy Language * Masculine * Masculine Noun * Meaning * Modifier * Modifiers * Modifying * Noun * Nouns * Noun Phrase * Numeral * Participle * Participles * Past Participle * Phrase * Phrases * Place * Plural * Predicate * Prefix * Preposition * Prepositional Phrase * Present Participle * Pronoun * Referring * Sentence * Sentences * Singular * Stem * Subject * Subject Complement * Suffix * Things * Verb * Verbal * Verbal Adjective * Verbal Noun * Verbs * Verb Form * Word * Words
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  Short phrases about "Adjective"
  Originally created: August 01, 2010.
  Links checked: March 29, 2013.
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