Û
539 Glossary for any unfamiliar terms
Adjectives and adjective phrases | 445
If the head of the noun phrase is one of the pronouns someone, somebody,
something
, somewhere; no one, nobody, nothing, nowhere; anyone, anybody,
anything
, anywhere; everyone, everybody, everything, everywhere, the attributive
adjective phrase occurs as a postmodifier:
There’s
nothing
good
about being poor.
There wasn’t really
anyone
famous
at Lordsborough [University].
There’s
something
definitely wrong
here.
Position of adjective and complement
If an attributive adjective has a complement, the whole adjective phrase or just its
complement must follow the head noun.
Examples of attributive adjectives with complements
example
type
Are they
a
similar age
?
adjective with no complement
Hardin reached under the counter and brought
adjective and complement both after the noun
out
a badge
similar to the one he was already
head
wearing on his waistcoat
.
A: So how do you see yourselves in twenty
adjective before the noun head; complement
years’ time?
after the noun head
B: I would imagine very much in
a
similar
position
to my mum and dad now
.
Helsinki has
a character
quite different from the Scandinavian capitals
.
You can buy
a computer system
good enough for most tasks
for less than £500.
It’s
a
very different room from the old one
.
I haven’t got
a
good enough voice to sing it
.
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:
Fans
keen to get their hands on the new book
had queued all night.
(Keen fans to get their hands on the new book …)
Events
open to the public
are listed overleaf.
By the time we got there,
the person
responsible for giving refunds
had gone
home.
It’s
a film
worth seeing
.
Some fixed expressions include postmodifying adjectives, for example chairperson
designate
, court martial, President Elect.
446 | Adjectives and adjective phrases
Cambridge Grammar of English
RESTRICTIONS ON THE FUNCTIONS OF ADJECTIVES
240
Adjectives restricted to noun phrases (attributive-only)
240a
Adjectives in the following meaning categories occur only in noun phrases (the
attributive function):
● Degree (intensifiers and downtoners), such as: absolute, complete, mere,
perfect
, proper, pure, real, sheer, true, utter, veritable:
It was
pure nonsense
.
(The nonsense was pure.)
This is
sheer heaven
.
Û
240c
● Temporal ordering, such as: former, latter, present, future, old (meaning ‘of
many years’ standing’, e.g. an old friend), early (meaning ‘of the initial period in
the history of something’, e.g. early English literature), late (meaning ‘died
recently’, e.g. the late Mrs Thompson):
In 1816 he married Charlotte, daughter of
the
future George IV of England
, and
lived in England after her death in 1817.
The only permanent display is
the
late actor William Holden
’s collection of
Asian and African art.
(late = recently deceased/dead)
● Restrictive adjectives, such as: certain, chief, main, major, only, particular,
principal, sole, very
:
You know,
the
main reason for being in business at all
is profit and that’s what
you ought to be judging.
He published
major works on logic and political theory
.
Adjectives restricted to copular complement (predicative-only)
240b
Some adjectives can be used only as a complement to copular verbs (the
predicative function), and not attributively. The majority of these are adjectives
with the prefix a-, and include: ablaze, afloat, alive, asleep, awake, awash:
The building
was
ablaze
, and we were trapped.
(It was an ablaze building, …)
I
was
asleep
in bed when she came to tell me.
Other adjectives that usually occur predicatively are well (and unwell), and ill,
referring to states of health:
His younger brother
was
ill
.
A: You’re
looking
well
.
B: And you are.
Û
539 Glossary for any unfamiliar terms
Adjectives and adjective phrases | 447
Very rarely well and ill may occur attributively with non-specific nouns such as
man
, woman, child, patient, etc., and health may occur with ill:
Dad hadn’t been
a
well man
for years.
Whatever feelings a wife may have, she must not add to
her
ill husband
’s
problems.
Two
critically ill patients
were admitted by the hospital late last night.
He retired because of
ill health
.
Adjectives with similar meanings can be substituted in the attributive function for
some of the predicative-only adjectives. For example, live can substitute for alive;
lone
can substitute for alone; sick can substitute for ill and unwell; sleeping can
substitute for asleep:
It’s better for digestion if the yoghurts are made with
live cultures
.
(alive)
It’s very much a book for the
lone traveller
.
(alone)
Her
sick child
keeps stopping her from working.
(ill)
[proverb]
Let
sleeping dogs
lie.
(asleep)
Different attributive and predicative meanings
240c
Some of the adjectives used attributively in 240a above have a different meaning
when used in the predicative function:
It’s
sheer chaos
.
(intensifier meaning: attributive only)
Care is needed on some of the stretches of path because the cliffs
are
sheer
.
(very steep/vertical; may be used attributively or, as here, predicatively)
…
the
late actor
William Holden …
(deceased/dead; attributive only)
The train
was
late
again.
(behind schedule; may be used attributively or, as here, predicatively)
Of course there’s going to be
a
certain amount of risk
involved, but you’ve got
to trust me on this.
(particular but not specified; attributive only)
I’
m not
absolutely certain
, but I think it’s very unlikely.
(sure/definite; normally predicative only)
448 | Adjectives and adjective phrases
Cambridge Grammar of English
Complex attributive adjective phrases
240d
When degree modifiers are used in attributive adjective phrases, their position
varies. Different degree modifiers require different positions for the adjective
phrase in relation to the indefinite article.
Positions of indefinite article and degree modifiers
example
comments
a/an
very/fairly/moderately/extremely tall man
typical position: indefinite article + intensifier +
adjective
quite
and rather are special cases
for quite:
quite a tall man
most frequent position: intensifier + indefinite
article + adjective
a
quite tall man
less frequent position: indefinite article +
intensifier + adjective
for rather:
a
rather tall man
most frequent position: indefinite article +
intensifier + adjective
rather a tall man
less frequent position: intensifier + indefinite
article + adjective
A-Z
66 Quite; 67 Rather
as/so tall a man as him
as/so
+ adjective + indefinite article + noun +
complement
a man
as/so tall as him
indefinite article + noun + as/so + adjective +
complement (less frequent in writing but more
frequent in informal speech)
a man
this/that tall
indefinite article + noun + this/that + adjective
this/that tall a man
this/that
+ adjective + indefinite article + noun
(less frequent)
How tall a man is he?
how
+ adjective + indefinite article + noun
I don’t know
how tall a man he is.
We kept in touch for
quite a long time.
He seemed
a rather childish, impetuous fellow.
But this is not
as big a problem as it might first appear.
He was willing enough, but my sister was good and virtuous, and hated his
brother with
a hatred as strong as mine.
It’s not
that big a place.
Û
539 Glossary for any unfamiliar terms
Adjectives and adjective phrases | 449
ORDER OF ATTRIBUTIVE ADJECTIVE PHRASES
241
Lists of adjectives
When a noun phrase is premodified by more than one adjective, there is a
preferred order for the adjectives. For example, colour normally precedes
material:
A
yellow plastic container was found at the scene of the crime.
(A plastic yellow container was found …)
Shape normally precedes material and material normally precedes purpose:
You need one of those
round, wooden, bathing tubs.
References to place or origin usually come after colour or shape and before
material:
You need one of those
round, Swedish, wooden, bathing tubs.
(You need one of those bathing, Swedish, wooden, round tubs.)
Evaluative adjectives which describe opinions or attitudes often come before more
neutrally descriptive ones:
She’s a
remarkable old woman. She’s just got such a fantastic, long memory.
(She’s an old remarkable woman. She’s just got such a long fantastic memory.)
The most neutral sequence of adjective types may be summarised as:
(determiner)
evaluation (e)
size (s)
physical quality (q)
shape (sh)
age (ag)
colour (c)
participle (pa)
origin (o)
material (m)
type (t)
purpose (p)
head noun
An example including a number of these types would be:
(e)
(s)
(q)
(ag) (c)
(o)
(p)
These
wonderful, monumental, strong, old, grey, Indian, log-carrying elephants
of Northern Thailand …
(an invented example to illustrate the possibilities)
A noun phrase which included all these types would be extremely rare.
450 | Adjectives and adjective phrases
Cambridge Grammar of English
Examples of multiple attributive adjectives involving beautiful:
(e)
(sh)
You can also sit in
the
beautiful semicircular courthouse
and listen to the trial
of a farmer accused of fraud.
It was designed by Bror Marklund and the whole hall unbelievably won the
(e)
(o) (p)
1964 award for
the
most beautiful Swedish public building
.
(e)
(pa)
…
the
beautiful walled city of Avila
, birthplace of Saint Teresa; …
(e) (s) (ag)
It was
a
beautiful little old church
.
(e)
(c)
(pa)
Where was
that
just most beautiful black-and-white timbered house
?
Adjectives joined by and
Some lists of adjectives are joined by and. When a list of adjectives occurs
predicatively, the penultimate and final adjectives are normally joined by and:
It was
wet, wild and windy. How can anyone forget a night like that?
And
occurs less commonly when the list of adjectives is in an attributive position:
A
tall, dark, mysterious stranger entered the room.
And
can occur when two or more adjectives of the same category are used, or
when the adjectives refer to different parts of the same thing:
He drives a
red and black Ferrari.
Û
539 Glossary for any unfamiliar terms
Adjectives and adjective phrases | 451
Adverbs and adverb phrases
Introduction
242
Adverb phrases
243
Types of meaning
244
Adverbs modifying phrases
245
Types of modification 245a
Degree adverbs and focusing adverbs 245b
Evaluative adverbs 245c
Evaluative, viewpoint and linking (disjunct and conjunct) adverbs
246
Copular verbs ( be, seem) and complementation
247
Adverbs used as short responses
248
Adverbs and discourse markers
249
| 453
Adverbs and adverb phrases
INTRODUCTION
242
Adverbs, the fourth major open word class, have strong affinities with adjectives.
Many adverbs are derived from adjectives, mostly by adding the suffix -ly.
(
Û
162 Adverbs for a full description of the construction of adverbs
.)
adjective
adverb
nice
nicely
beautiful
beautifully
fond
fondly
slow
slowly
Most adverbs, like most adjectives, are gradable: they can be modified by other
(degree) adverbs, including comparative forms, to form adverb phrases which are
very similar in their structural characteristics to adjective phrases:
She sings
really beautifully.
(compare: She has a really beautiful voice.)
He played
more skilfully this time.
(compare: He was more skilful this time.)
Adverb phrases most typically function as adjuncts in the clause structure, but
may also occur as complements:
I ate my dinner
very slowly.
(adjunct)
Could you put it
just there please?
(complement, required by put)
Your sister’s
here.
(complement of be)
However, adverb phrases differ from adjective phrases in their function. Adjective
phrases most typically modify noun phrases (or are used in the predicate of the
clause to state a quality of a noun phrase). Adverb phrases typically modify verb
phrases, adjectives and other adverbs. Some adverbs modify whole clauses or
sentences:
I think a doctor or a nurse should be a
careful person, and she isn’t.
(adjective: modifying the noun person)
I was always very
careful not to offend them.
(adjective: predicative, describing the subject I)
They walked
carefully along the edge of the canal.
(adverb: modifying the verb phrase; answers the question ‘How did they walk?’)
(They walked careful along the edge of the canal.)
✪
Adjectives cannot modify verbs:
She spoke angrily.
(She spoke angry.)
Here are some examples of how adverbs modify different items:
Talk
properly
!
(modifying a verb – talk)
An
extremely tall
man came round the corner.
(modifying an adjective – tall)
The business in Holland went
remarkably smoothly
.
(modifying another adverb – smoothly)
Only someone very stupid
would say that.
(modifying a noun phrase – someone very stupid)
We’ve got our silver wedding
soon
, so we’re planning a few days away.
(modifying the whole clause)
Frankly, when he smiles, it terrifies me.
(modifying the whole sentence)
Adverbs do not normally have inflected forms, but a few, most of which are
identical in form to adjectives, inflect for comparison (e.g. far, fast, hard, high,
long
, low):
We haven’t got very
far with that yet.
That’s probably the area where they’ve gone
furthest.
But the happy life did not last
long.
You know, she’d be quite happy to stay
longer.
Û
465 Comparative and superlative adverbs
454 | Adverbs and adverb phrases
Cambridge Grammar of English
ADVERB PHRASES
243
Adverbs function as the head of adverb phrases.
An adverb may function alone as the head of the adverb phrase or it may have
dependents of various kinds.
In general, these dependents are similar in type to those found in adjective
phrases – partly because most adverbs are related to adjectives and partly because
many adverbs, like many adjectives, are gradable.
Examples of simple adverb phrases (head only) and complex adverb phrases
(head + dependents) are given in the table below.
Simple and complex adverb phrases (adverb phrases are in green, adverb heads are in bold)
example
dependents
You
rarely
get a full break.
head only
Personally
I’m not fond of ice cream.
head only
The six weeks went by
very
quickly
.
premodifier + head
Dr Smith wrote back
fairly
promptly
.
premodifier + head
It’s amazing
how
quickly
you get used to it.
premodifier + head
But
luckily enough
, neighbours did see them and
head + postmodifier
called the police.
He plays
really
well for a beginner
.
premodifier + head + postmodifier
Unfortunately for me
, I started to get ill.
head + complement
Its body seems to move
almost
independently of the head
.
premodifier + head + complement
Occasionally, the structure may be more complex:
adverb phrase
premodifier head
adverb phrase
premodifier
head
I was |
very
nearly
|
there
.
The structure of the adverb phrase may also be discontinuous, i.e. it may consist of
a structure which commences before the adverb and is completed after it:
I think he put it
more
succinctly than that
.
(than that is the complement of more)
Nuclear power stations produce electricity
much more
cheaply than other types
of power station
.
Û
539 Glossary for any unfamiliar terms
Adverbs and adverb phrases | 455
TYPES OF MEANING
244
There are a number of different types of meaning adverb phrases can have. The
important general types are shown in the table below.
Main types of meaning of adverb phrases
type
function
example
manner
refers to how something happens
Those flowers grow
quickly, don’t they?
The vicar spoke
very nicely.
place
refers to where something happens
Many
locally owned bookshops are
cutting prices.
Sign
here please.
time
refers to when something happens
Her father died
recently.
He came in
very early.
duration
refers to length of time over which
No, I’m not staying there
permanently.
something happens
frequency
refers to how often something happens
I
often go and see them.
degree
refers to how much, to what degree
I was
greatly relieved when we were
something happens
finally rid of her.
focusing
focuses on or specifies an entity
Waiter: What about you, sir?
Customer: Just ice cream please.
modal
expresses degrees of truth, possibility,
She
most probably thinks I’m joking.
necessity, etc.
evaluative
judges or comments on the event, gives
I
stupidly forgot to mention the meeting
the speaker’s opinion
to him.
viewpoint
expresses the perspective or standpoint
I
personally don’t think you would hate
from which the speaker sees things
it, Elaine.
linking
links and relates clauses and sentences
She wanted to study but there wasn’t
to one another
any provision.
However, her younger
sisters are now studying.
Û
326b and 326c on the order of adverbs
ADVERBS MODIFYING PHRASES
245
Types of modification
245a
The following types of modification are common. (Adverb phrases are in bold,
modified phrases are in green.)
● Adverb phrase modifying verb phrase:
He’s
played
extremely well.
She
blushed
furiously.
456 | Adverbs and adverb phrases
Cambridge Grammar of English
● Adverb phrase modifying adjective phrase:
It was
perfectly
acceptable
.
Her heartbeat was
very slightly
erratic
.
● Adverb phrase modifying adverb phrase:
She’d worked
extremely
hard
.
It seems to affect different people
completely
differently
.
● Adverb phrase modifying noun phrase:
It’s a chapel but it’s
almost
a cave
.
It takes
quite
a dose
to reach fatal levels.
● Adverb phrase modifying prepositional phrase:
It’s really
right
out in the country
.
The situation was
completely
out of control
.
Degree adverbs and focusing adverbs
245b
Degree adverbs and focusing adverbs are the most common type of adverb
modifiers of phrases. These include (adverbs in bold, modified phrases in green):
Degree
I wouldn’t mind living
a bit
longer
.
Oh that will make it
doubly
attractive
won’t it?
The food was
pretty
awful
actually.
Quite
obviously
they don’t want to push anything under the carpet.
They don’t normally have three together so it seemed
rather
strange
.
He’s going to be
terribly
upset
.
His sister is
totally
different from his brother
.
absolutely
a (little) bit
almost
awfully
completely
doubly
enough
entirely
extremely
fairly
highly
a lot
lots
perfectly
pretty
quite
rather
remarkably
slightly
somewhat
terribly
too
totally
utterly
very
Û
539 Glossary for any unfamiliar terms
Adverbs and adverb phrases | 457
Focusing
They’d be upset,
especially
my father
, if I didn’t try.
I just feel
generally
fed up
.
Evaluative adverbs
245c
Evaluative adverbs are also used to modify phrases:
But something has gone
oddly
wrong
in the meantime.
The family, two brothers and a sister, lived
curiously
isolated
.
EVALUATIVE, VIEWPOINT AND LINKING (DISJUNCT AND CONJUNCT) ADVERBS
246
Often adverbs are fully integrated in the clause (
Û
244 above, the examples of
manner, place and time adverbs
). However, adverbs may be less integrated in the
clause structure and may modify the whole sentence or utterance. Evaluative and
viewpoint adverbs often function in this way. Adverbs of this type are referred to
as disjunct adverbs:
What was more,
oddly, he seemed to have bought enough for two.
(evaluative)
Personally, I think it’s a waste of time.
(viewpoint)
Linking adverbs express a logical relationship (e.g. cause and consequence,
sequence in time, contrast) between two clauses or sentences. These may be
referred to as conjunct adverbs:
The overwhelming majority of big-name French chefs are, as they have always
been, men. There is one place,
however, that for 100 years and more has
provided an exception – Lyon, close to the Swiss and Italian borders and
France’s second city.
The bad news is that your shares are almost certainly overvalued at present, as
is the entire banking sector. The good news is that they are probably worth
keeping
anyway.
especially
generally
just
largely
only
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