单词 | adjective |
释义 | adjective1 of 2noun ad·jec·tive ˈa-jik-tiv also ˈa-jə-tiv : a word belonging to one of the major form classes in any of numerous languages and typically serving as a modifier of a noun to denote a quality of the thing named, to indicate its quantity or extent, or to specify a thing as distinct from something else The word red in "the red car" is an adjective. adjective 2 of 2adjective1 : of, relating to, or functioning as an adjective an adjective clause 2 : not standing by itself : dependent 3 : requiring or employing a mordant adjective dyes 4 : procedural adjective law adjectively adverb Did you know?What is an adjective? Adjectives describe or modify—that is, they limit or restrict the meaning of—nouns and pronouns. They may name qualities of all kinds: huge, red, angry, tremendous, unique, rare, etc. An adjective usually comes right before a noun: "a red dress," "fifteen people." When an adjective follows a linking verb such as be or seem, it is called a predicate adjective: "That building is huge," "The workers seem happy." Most adjectives can be used as predicate adjectives, although some are always used before a noun. Similarly, a few adjectives can only be used as predicate adjectives and are never used before a noun. Some adjectives describe qualities that can exist in different amounts or degrees. To do this, the adjective will either change in form (usually by adding -er or -est) or will be used with words like more, most, very, slightly, etc.: "the older girls," "the longest day of the year," "a very strong feeling," "more expensive than that one." Other adjectives describe qualities that do not vary—"nuclear energy," "a medical doctor"—and do not change form. The four demonstrative adjectives—this, that, these, and those—are identical to the demonstrative pronouns. They are used to distinguish the person or thing being described from others of the same category or class. This and these describe people or things that are nearby, or in the present. That and those are used to describe people or things that are not here, not nearby, or in the past or future. These adjectives, like the definite and indefinite articles (a, an, and the), always come before any other adjectives that modify a noun. An indefinite adjective describes a whole group or class of people or things, or a person or thing that is not identified or familiar. The most common indefinite adjectives are: all, another, any, both, each, either, enough, every, few, half, least, less, little, many, more, most, much, neither, one (and two, three, etc.), other, several, some, such, whole. The interrogative adjectives—primarily which, what, and whose—are used to begin questions. They can also be used as interrogative pronouns.
The possessive adjectives—my, your, his, her, its, our, their—tell you who has, owns, or has experienced something, as in "I admired her candor, "Our cat is 14 years old," and "They said their trip was wonderful." Nouns often function like adjectives. When they do, they are called attributive nouns. When two or more adjectives are used before a noun, they should be put in proper order. Any article (a, an, the), demonstrative adjective (that, these, etc.), indefinite adjective (another, both, etc.), or possessive adjective (her, our, etc.) always comes first. If there is a number, it comes first or second. True adjectives always come before attributive nouns. The ordering of true adjectives will vary, but the following order is the most common: opinion word→ size→ age→ shape→ color→ nationality→ material. Participles are often used like ordinary adjectives. They may come before a noun or after a linking verb. A present participle (an -ing word) describes the person or thing that causes something; for example, a boring conversation is one that bores you. A past participle (usually an -ed word) describes the person or thing who has been affected by something; for example, a bored person is one who has been affected by boredom.
Example Sentences Noun The words blue in “the blue car,” deep in “the water is deep,” and tired in “I'm very tired” are adjectives. Recent Examples on the Web Noun This is very good and pretty and wearable and exciting stuff, pick your adjective. Stephan Rabimov, Forbes, 25 Aug. 2022 Visitors can look up how to translate a word, see the plural form of the word, change the tense of a verb or add an adjective to a noun. Alena Naiden, Anchorage Daily News, 21 Aug. 2022 How very uncool or urban or whatever random adjective got snipped from an old copy of the Oprah Magazine and glued to my mom vision board. Helena Andrews-dyer, Washington Post, 15 Aug. 2022 As an icebreaker, Sue Skirvin asks the 15 or so people in the room to give an adjective that starts with the same letter as their name. Austin Fuller, Orlando Sentinel, 9 Aug. 2022 In this neutral sense, cheer typically needed an adjective to accompany it. Ian Beacock, The Atlantic, 2 Aug. 2022 Actress Emily Bregl posted a loving tribute to Heche over the weekend by calling attention to the memoir and how often people leaned on the adjective when inquiring about her onetime costar on Men in Trees. Chris Gardner, The Hollywood Reporter, 15 Aug. 2022 Her father owned a funeral home, which his kids rationalized with the adjective in the title. Chris Jones, Chicago Tribune, 12 Aug. 2022 There's the self-aware, slightly unsettling adjective (unhinged, unwell, psycho); the probably litigious, definitely unlicensed high-fashion reference (Birkin, Gucci, Prada); or the pop culture nod (Gone Girl, Owl Theory, EGOTing). Halie Lesavage, Harper's BAZAAR, 3 Aug. 2022 Adjective Plus, which marries the screen size and battery life of the iPhone Pro Max phones to the lesser processor, display quality, and camera system of the standard, no-adjective iPhone 14. Andrew Cunningham, Ars Technica, 7 Sep. 2022 Corporate sales count shenanigans aside, the new 2021 no-adjective Rogue is primed to be a hit, one of the bestselling compact SUVs in the country. Dallas News, 10 Oct. 2020 Corporate sales count shenanigans aside, the new 2021 no-adjective Rogue is primed to be a hit, one of the bestselling compact SUVs in the country. Dallas News, 10 Oct. 2020 Corporate sales count shenanigans aside, the new 2021 no-adjective Rogue is primed to be a hit, one of the bestselling compact SUVs in the country. Dallas News, 10 Oct. 2020 Corporate sales count shenanigans aside, the new 2021 no-adjective Rogue is primed to be a hit, one of the bestselling compact SUVs in the country. Dallas News, 10 Oct. 2020 Corporate sales count shenanigans aside, the new 2021 no-adjective Rogue is primed to be a hit, one of the bestselling compact SUVs in the country. Dallas News, 10 Oct. 2020 Corporate sales count shenanigans aside, the new 2021 no-adjective Rogue is primed to be a hit, one of the bestselling compact SUVs in the country. Dallas News, 10 Oct. 2020 Corporate sales count shenanigans aside, the new 2021 no-adjective Rogue is primed to be a hit, one of the bestselling compact SUVs in the country. Dallas News, 10 Oct. 2020 See More Word HistoryEtymology Noun Middle English adjectif, borrowed from Anglo-French & Late Latin; Anglo-French adjectyf, borrowed from Late Latin adjectīvum, from neuter of adjectivus adjective entry 2 (as translation of Greek epítheton) Adjective Middle English adjectif, borrowed from Anglo-French & Late Latin; Anglo-French adjectyf, borrowed from Late Latin adjectīvus, from Latin adjectus (past participle of adjicere "to throw at, attach, contribute, add to (in speech or writing)," from ad- ad- + jacere "to throw") + -īvus -ive — more at jet entry 3 First Known Use Noun 14th century, in the meaning defined above Adjective 15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1 Phrases Containing adjective
Kids Definitionadjective noun ad·jec·tive ˈa-jik-tiv : a word that says something about a noun or pronoun In the phrases "good people," "someone good," "it's good to be here," and "they seem very good" the word "good" is an adjective. |
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