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Adjective
An adjective is a word that qualifies a noun or a pronoun. For Example,
Ram is a good boy.
He is intelligent.
In the above sentences, ‘good’ and ‘intelligent’ qualify ‘Ram’ and tell us the qualities of ‘he’.
Adjectives come before a noun and after a verb.
Types of Adjectives
There are eight types of Adjectives.
1. Adjective of quality
Adjectives that show the kind or quality of a person or thing. E.g.
An honest man.
Adjective of quality is used in two ways.
(a) Attributive use – When an adjective is used before noun, it is said to be used
attributively.
E.g. : Solomon was a wise king.
Here wise is used before a noun (king) so it is attributive.
(b) Predicative use – When an adjective is used after verb, it is said to be used
predicatively.
E.g. : The weather is pleasant.
2. Proper Adjective
An adjective which is formed from proper nouns is called as proper adjective.
E.g.: Buddhist monastery, British rule.
Here ‘Buddhist‘ and ‘British‘ are proper adjectives.
3. Adjective of quantity
An adjective that shows how much of a thing is meant. For Example, some milk, enough
oil, sufficient sugar, no manners.
Here some, enough, sufficient and no are adjective of quantity.
4. Adjective of number
An adjective that shows how many persons or things are meant or in what order a person
or thing stands.
It is of two types:
(i) Definite
Definite denotes an exact number. E.g. : Five boys, fifth row.
(ii) Indefinite
Indefinite does not denote an exact number. E.g. : Few girls, several boys.
Cardinal Adjective – Definite numbers like one, two, three, four are Cardinal adjectives.
E.g. : The first chapter of this book is on verb.
Note : 1. Article ‘the’ is used before Ordinal and not before Cardinal.
E.g. : Lesson one is on verbs.
The first chapter of this book is on verbs.
2. When both Ordinal and Cardinal adjectives come together in a sentence, they are in the
order ‘OC’. This means first ‘Ordinal’ and then ‘Cardinal’.
E.g. : We will revise the lessons in the last two classes.
5. Demonstrative Adjective
The adjective that points out which person or thing is meant is known as the demonstrative
adjective.
E.g.: This boy, that group, these people, those countries.
Note : If this, that, these or those are immediately followed by a noun, these words are
called demonstrative adjectives and if these words are immediately followed by a verb,
these words are known as demonstrative pronouns.
6. Distributive Adjective
The Adjective which refers to each one of the number is known as distributive adjective.
E.g. : Each candidate is honest.
Every boy is present today.
Note : If each, every, either or neither is immediately followed by noun, it is known
as Distributive Adjective and if each, every, either or neither is followed by some other
word. It is known as Distributive Pronoun.
Each boy took the test. Each of the boys took the test.
7. Interrogative Adjective
What, which and whose are interrogative adjectives when they are used with a noun.
E.g. : Which room is hers?
Whose book is this?
Note : If ‘what’, ‘which’, ‘whose’ is followed by a noun, these words are interrogative
adjectives and if it is followed by a verb, it is known as interrogative pronoun.
Noun and Its Types with Examples Pronoun and Its Type with Examples
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