Own can be intensified by
very:
He’s just bought his very own car.
It was Laura’s very own engagement present to them.
PERSON
65
The noun person has two plural forms, persons and people. Persons is used in
more formal, legalistic contexts; people is the more widely used plural:
She’s just a horrible person.
There are a lot of nice people at our school, aren’t there?
(There are a lot of nice persons at our school, aren’t there?)
During the 1980s, less than 5 per cent of the US federal budget was spent on
programmes that supported families with children, while nearly 24 per cent of
federal resources were spent on persons over the age of 65.
(formal)
PRETTY
A–Z
66 Quite
QUITE
66
Quite + gradable adjectives and adverbs
66a
Quite can be used as an intensifying adverb with gradable adjectives and adverbs,
with a meaning similar to ‘rather’, ‘fairly’ or ‘to a considerable degree’:
But it’s going to be quite interesting driving home tonight, cos it’s the first time
I’ve used it in the dark since I put my headlights back in.
[showing someone round a house]
Here’s the front room … second reception room … large kitchen … quite
pleasant, isn’t it?
Things began to get worse quite quickly.
Quite + non-gradable adjectives and adverbs
66b
Quite can also be used with non-gradable adjectives and adverbs, with the
meaning of ‘totally/completely’:
It was quite impossible to have a conversation with him.
I don’t know whose coat it is, but it’s quite definitely not mine.
126 | From word to grammar: an A–Z
Cambridge Grammar of English
Quite + nouns
66c
Quite a/an is used before a noun or before a noun modified by a gradable
adjective.
When used before a noun, it is very emphatic, and means ‘a considerable’ or ‘a
noteworthy example of’:
It’s quite a drive from here to north Wales, about five hours.
You’ve got quite a garden here, wow.
When used with a gradable adjective + noun, quite a means the same as ‘a fairly/a
rather’:
You also need to be flexible and have quite a strong stomach.
(or: … a fairly strong stomach)
I thought he was quite a nice person.
(or: … a rather nice person)
With non-gradable adjectives and adjectives of extreme or intensified meaning
followed by nouns, the word order is often a quite + adjective + noun:
She was a quite superb teacher.
The foundations of the English Channel, its geological framework, formed
gradually, but its final shaping was a quite different and perhaps even
catastrophic event.
Quite the + adjective + noun may also occur in affirmative clauses in very formal
styles, with the meaning of ‘absolutely’. It is most common with superlatives:
[referring to a TV review in the Guardian, a British daily newspaper]
‘“After Dark”’, the Guardian once said, was ‘quite the best idea for television
since men sat around the camp-fire talking while, in the darkness round them,
watching eyes glowed red.’
Quite + comparatives
66d
Quite is not used alone before a comparative. Normally a lot or a bit is added:
He was quite a lot older than her, and had children that needed looking after.
(He was quite older than her …)
As I say, I had my babies quite a bit earlier than these ladies.
(… I had my babies quite earlier than these ladies.)
Quite + verbs
66e
In informal spoken language, the only verbs which commonly occur with
quite in
affirmative clauses are like, enjoy, understand and agree. Quite occupies the
normal positions for mid-position adverbs (
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