Tuesday, July 26, 2016

ADJECTIVE PHRASES: FUNCTIONS

Adjective phrases: functions

Adjective phrases with nouns

One of the main functions of adjective phrases is that they go with nouns and change or add to their meaning.
Hair: black hairbrown hairstraight blonde hairlong red hair.
Adjective phrases before a noun are called attributive phrases.
adjective phrase
noun
She speaks in a
very slow
voice.
We never cycle in
heavy
rain.
I’d love a cup of
hot
chocolate.
Adjective phrases before a noun occur after determiners.
determiner
adjective phrase
noun
Sarah is
my
youngest
sister.
Where are
the
really big
bowls?
I know
some
very good
restaurants.
If the head of the noun phrase is one of the following pronouns, the adjective phrase occurs after the pronoun:
anyone
everyone
no one
someone
anybody
everybody
nobody
somebody
anything
everything
nothing
something
anywhere
everywhere
nowhere
somewhere
noun phrase
head
adjective phrase
There’s
nowhere
nice
to go for a walk here.
I have
nothing
good
to say about it as a holiday resort.
There’s
something
terribly sad
about saying goodbye, isn’t there?
Let’s go
somewhere
different.
If an attributive adjective needs a word or phrase to complete its meaning (a complement), either the whole adjective phrase or just its complement must follow the head noun.
Compare
Are they a similar colour?
adjective (in bold) with no complement
She was wearing a dresssimilar to the one that she wore when she first met her husband.
adjective (in bold) and complement (underlined) both after the noun head (dress)
I was living in a similarapartment to this one.
adjective (in bold) before the noun head (apartment); complement (underlined) after the noun head
Warning:
For a number of adjectives, the whole adjective phrase must follow the noun when a complement of the adjective is used. These include closed, eager, full, happy, keen, open, ready, responsible, (un)willing, worth.
noun
phrase
adjective phrase + complement
Who is
the person
responsible for security?
Fans
keen to get a ticket
waited all night in the queue.
We have
a boat
ready to leave in an hour.

Adjective phrases with verbs (Brenda is happy)

The second main function of an adjective phrase is to be a complement to a verb. It completes the meaning of verbs that describe what the subject is, does or experiences. These verbs include beseembecome, feel, smell, taste (linking verbs). When adjective phrases complement verbs, this is called their predicative function.
subject
linking verb
adjective phrase
I
felt
sad.
This soup
smells
really wonderful.
She thought
the room
was
very strange.
That coffee
tastes
too strong.

Object complements

We also use adjective phrases to give more information about an object (underlined) so as to complete its meaning (object complement):
Sitting in traffic drives me crazy.
The fire has made the room much warmer.
Money doesn’t always make us happy.

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