Collins Cobuild English Grammar (34 page)

BOOK: Collins Cobuild English Grammar
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typical
understanding
useful
violent
warm
weak
wet
wide
wild
worried
young

Identifying type:
financial help
,
abdominal pains

2.26
    The other main type of adjective consists of adjectives that you use to identify the type or
class
that something belongs to. For example, if you say
financial help
, you are using the adjective
financial
to describe what type of help you are talking about (that is, to
classify
help). Adjectives that are used in this way are called
classifying adjectives
.

financial
help.

abdominal
pains.
…a
medieval
manuscript.
…my
daily
shower.
…an
equal
partnership.
…a
sufficient
amount of milk.

Note that
noun modifiers
(see paragraphs
2.169
to
2.174
) are used in a similar way to classifying adjectives. For example,
financial matters
and
money matters
are similar in both structure and meaning.

Here is a list of classifying adjectives:

absolute
active
actual
agricultural
alternative
annual
apparent
available
basic
central
chemical
civil
commercial
communist
conservative
cultural
daily
democratic
direct
domestic
double
due
east
eastern
economic
educational
electric
empty
external
female
financial
foreign
free
full
general
golden
historical
human
ideal
independent
industrial
inevitable
intellectual
internal
international
legal
local
magic
male
medical
mental
military
modern
moral
national
natural
negative
north
northern
nuclear
official
open
original
personal
physical
political
positive
possible
potential
private
professional
proper
psychological
public
raw
ready
real
religious
revolutionary
right
royal
rural
scientific
separate
sexual
single
social
solid
south
southern
standard
straight
sufficient
theoretical
traditional
urban
west
western
wooden
wrong
2.27
    Adjectives such as
British
,
American
, and
Australian
, that indicate nationality or origin, are also classifying adjectives. They start with a capital letter because they are related to names of countries.

American
citizens.

Some classifying adjectives are formed from people’s names, for example
Victorian
and
Shakespearean
. They also start with a capital letter.


Victorian
houses.
2.28
    Because they put something in a class, classifying adjectives are not
gradable
in the way that qualitative adjectives are. For example, if you do not have to pay for something, you cannot say that it is
very free
, or
rather free
. Things are either in a particular class or not in it. Therefore, classifying adjectives do not have comparatives and superlatives and are not normally used with adverbs like
very
and
rather
.

However, when you want to show that you feel strongly about what you are saying, you can use an
intensifying
adverb such as
absolutely
with a classifying adjective. This is explained in paragraphs
2.147
to
2.148
.

adjectives that are of both types

2.29
    Some adjectives can be either
qualitative
or
classifying
depending on the meaning. For example, in
an emotional person
,
emotional
is a qualitative adjective meaning
feeling or expressing strong emotions
; it has a comparative and superlative and it can be used with words like
very
and
rather
. Thus, a person can be
very emotional
,
rather emotional
, or
more emotional
than someone else. However, in
the emotional needs of children
,
emotional
is a classifying adjective meaning
relating to a person’s emotions
, and so it cannot be used with words like
very
or
rather
, and it does not have a comparative and superlative.

Here is a list of adjectives that are often used both as qualitative adjectives and as classifying adjectives:

academic
conscious
dry
educational
effective
emotional
extreme
late
modern
moral
objective
ordinary
regular
religious
revolutionary
rural
scientific
secret
similar
social

Identifying colours: colour adjectives

2.30
    When you want to say what colour something is, you use a
colour adjective
.
…her
blue
eyes.
…a
red
ribbon.

Here is a list of the main colour adjectives:

black
blue
brown
cream
green
grey
orange
pink
purple
red
scarlet
violet
white
yellow

adding extra information to colour adjectives

2.31
    If you want to specify a colour more precisely, you use a word such as
light
,
pale
,
dark
,
deep
, or
bright
, in front of a colour adjective.

light brown
hair.
…a
pale green
suit.
…a
dark blue
dress.

deep red
dye.
…her
bright blue
eyes.

These combinations sometimes have hyphens.

…a
light-blue
suit.
…the plant’s tiny
pale-pink
flowers.

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