OZBEKISTON RESPUBLIKASI
OLIY VA ORTA MAXSUS TALIM VAZIRLIGI
QARSHI DAVLAT UNIVERSITETI
INGLIZ FILALOGIYASI
FAKULTETI
“NAZARIY GRAMMATIKA
FANIDAN
KURS ISHI
Mavzu: Adjective as a part of speech
Bajardi: Hamdamova Muxlisa Akrom qizi
(talabaning ismi-sharifi, otasining ismi)
Ingliz filalogiyasi,xorijiy til va adabiyoti,3-kurs 019.28guruh
(fakultet, bakalavriat yonalishi, kursi, guruhi)
Ilmiy rahbar: Nashirova Shahnoza
(ismi-sharifi, ilmiy darajasi, lavozimi)
QARSHI-2022
THEME: Adjective as a part of speech
Contents
Introduction
Main body:
Chapter 1
1.1Adjectives
1.2An attribute and a predicative function of adjectives
1.3Qualitative and relative.
1.4Category of state
Chapter 2
2.1Position of Adjectives
2.2Degrees of Comparison
2.3 The structure of the analytical degrees of comparison
Conclusion
Appendix
Bibliography
Introduction
We are going to investigate one of the important parts of speech in modern English. The adjective expresses the categorial semantics of property of a substance. It means that each adjective used in tile text presupposes relation to some noun the property of whose referent it denotes, such as its material, color, dimensions, position, state, and other characteristics both permanent and temporary. It follows from this that, unlike nouns, adjectives do not possess a full nominative value. Indeed, words like long, hospitable, fragrant cannot affect any self-dependent nominations; as units of informative sequences they exist only in collocations showing what is long, who is hospitable, what is fragrant.
Adjectives exist in most languages. The most widely recognized adjectives in English are words such as big, old, and tired that actually describe people, places, or things. These words can themselves be modified with adverbs, as in the phrase very big. The articles a, an, and the and possessive nouns, such as Mary's, are classified as adjectives by some grammarians; however, such classification may be specific to one particular language.
The semantically bound character of the adjective is emphasized in English by the use of the prop-substitute one in the absence of the notional head-noun of the phrase. E.g.:
I don't want a yellow balloon, let me have the green one over there.
On the other hand, if the adjective is placed in a nominatively self-dependent position, this leads to its substantivizing. E.g.: Outside it was a beautiful day, and the sun tinged the snow with red. Cf.: The sun tinged the snow with the red color.
Adjectives
Adjectives are distinguished by a specific combinability with nouns, which they modify, if not accompanied by adjuncts, usually in pre-position, and occasionally in postposition; by a combinability with link-verbs, both functional and notional; by a combinability with modifying adverbs. Adjectives are the third major class of words in English, after nouns and verbs. Adjectives are words expressing properties of objects (e.g. large, blue, simple, clever, economic, progressive, productive, etc.) and, hence, qualifying nouns. Adjectives in English do not change for number or case. The only grammatical category they have is the degrees of comparison. They are also characterized by functions in the sentence.
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