adjective phrases). These are dealt with in 240d below.
Premodification and postmodification of adjectives
238b
The major exception is the degree adverb
enough, which is a postmodifier:
It’s not
long
enough.
(It’s not enough long.)
Adverbs other than adverbs of degree may also premodify adjectives:
The house was
unusually
silent
that day.
It was
wonderfully
peaceful
at Gelli.
I don’t know how
seriously
ill
they are.
Premodification and gradability
238c
Most everyday adjectives are gradable, i.e. they denote qualities, properties, states,
conditions, relations, etc. which vary in their degree or extent.
Gradable adjectives can be premodified by degree expressions (usually adverb
phrases) which specify different degrees of the feature in question.
example
comments
He’s
very
tall
.
He’s
fairly
tall
.
He’s
this
tall
.
This tall
would be typically spoken with a
gesture indicating a specific height.
I didn’t realise he was
that
tall
.
That tall
might refer to a statement made by
someone about someone’s height or to the
moment of seeing someone very tall.
He is over
two metres
tall
.
Over two metres
is a noun phrase. Certain
adjectives expressing numerically measurable
properties may be modified by such noun
phrases: She is ten years old; The wood is two
centimetres thick; You’re ten minutes late.
A–Z
80
Worth, worthwhile
He is
so
tall
that he can touch the ceiling.
Some degree adverbs (so, too, as) need a
complement (underlined) to complete their
He is
too
tall
to drive.
meaning. The complement may be a clause or a
phrase; it occurs after the head adjective. The
structure is discontinuous (split into two parts,
one part pre-head, the other post-head).
He is
as
tall
as his father.
The comparative with as … as and the suffix -er
have the same function of specifying degree as
He is
tall
er than his sister.
the various premodifiers. The structure with as
is discontinuous.
How
tall
is he?
Interrogative how is used to ask questions or to
utter exclamations about degree, but with an
How
tall
he is!
important difference in word order.
Û
539 Glossary for any unfamiliar terms
Adjectives and adjective phrases | 441
Non-gradable adjectives cannot normally be premodified in these ways.
Non-gradable adjectives include: automatic; dead/alive; female/male;
Irish/Brazilian/Thai/
etc.; married/unmarried/single:
This cat is male.
(This cat is more male than that one.)
This plant is dead.
(This plant is rather dead.)
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