- •4. Plural Identical in Form With the Singular.
- •Expression of Number in Different Classes of Nouns
- •Number of Collective Nouns
- •Nouns Used Only in the Plural
- •Nouns Used in the Plural in a Special Sense
- •Double Plural Forms
- •III. 1. Exercises for practice
- •Unit IV.
- •IV.1. Grammar point
- •IV. 2. Exercises for practice
- •Replace the underlined adjective with a different adjective which keeps
- •Complete the dialogues.
- •Complete the text.
- •Rewrite the sentences using the phrasal verbs as compound nouns.
- •Complete the sentences with a compound.
- •Unit V. The case of nouns. Adjectivized nouns.
- •V.1. Grammar point
- •The possessive case.
- •The use of the possessive case
- •Some special cases of the possessive case.
- •The absolute possessive.
- •A possessive governing another possessive
- •The use of articles and attributes with nouns in the possessive case
- •Adjectivized nouns
- •V. 2. Exercises for practice .
- •VI. 1. Grammar Point.
- •Agreement between subject and predicate
- •VI. 2. Exercises for practice
Adjectivized nouns
As the English language has very few suffixes forming relative adjectives it freely uses adjectivized nouns to indicate that the object denoted by the noun is characterized through its relation to another object .
An adjectivized noun is a noun turned into an adjective only in a given sentence, only, so to say, for the time being, without entering the vocabulary of the English language as a newly-formed regular adjective. It is an instance of provisional conversion, conversion for the occasion.
In the sentence It was a purely family gathering the word family is an adjectivized noun, but in the dictionary this word is marked as a noun. Similarly, in the sentence They receive evening and weekly papers the word evening is an adjectivized noun; in the dictionary it is listed as a noun.
But there is, of course, no hard and fast line of demarcation between an adjectivized noun and a regular adjective formed from a noun by means of conversion, such as chief, choice, gold, cotton, etc.; an adjectivized noun may in the course of time turn into a regular adjective, may develop degrees of comparison as is the case, with such converted adjectives as chief and choice (originally only nouns): the chiefest trouble, the choicest company.
An adjectivized noun used attributively may be coordinated with regular adjectives (asyndetically or by means of a coordinative conjunction) which shows that it is treated as an adjective:
He said it in a brisk, business tone (the adjectivized noun business is coordinated asyndetically with the adjective brisk). They receive London and provincial papers (the adjectivized noun London is coordinated with the adjective provincial by means of the coordinative conjunction and). Do you prefer country or urban life? (the adjectivized noun country is coordinated with the adjective urban by means of the coordinative conjunction or). Mounted and foot militia kept order in the streets. The children greatly enjoyed the open air, healthy life of the camp.
The prop-word one which is used in English when an adjective used as an attribute stands without its head-noun, may also follow an adjectivized noun which thus clearly shows its adjectival nature:
That muslin dress is my best summer one. The house was a four-storey one. In place of the old wooden house they have built a beautiful stone one.
Her lower lip had a way of thrusting the middle of her top one upward. (Hardy.)
Adjectivized nouns may be modified by adverbs as regular
adjectives are:
It was a purely family gathering (the adjectivized noun family is modified by the adverb purely). He wrote some really first-class plays (the adjectivized noun first-class is modified by the adverb really). We objected on purely business grounds. The best books by Soviet writers are of truly world significance.
In such cases as a brick house, a stone bridge, an oak table, the words brick, stone, and oak are regarded as adjectivized nouns analogous to regular adjectives denoting the material of which the thing is made: a woollen dress, a wooden house, an oaken chair (now rare).
Some of these words denoting material, formerly adjectivized nouns, have now turned into regular adjectives, and are marked as such in the dictionary: silk, cotton, gold, silver. These may be used not only attributively but also predicatively:
The ring is gold. The dress is silk. The shirt is cotton. (But not: The house is stone. The chair is oak.)
In all the attributive phrases (adjectivized noun + head-noun) the two elements are regarded as two separate sense-units, as two words: the adjectivized noun, as a word denoting quality, the head-noun, as a word denoting substance:
Somewhere in the distance sheep bells tinkled and in the shrubbery a thrush was singing its evening song. The rye fields began just outside their fence. The Moscow Underground is the most beautiful underground railway in the world. Research work is carried out in our institutes. By carrying out the plan for the transformation of nature our people are making a fresh contribution to world civilization.
But there are instances when both elements are thought of as constituting one idea, when they are blended into one sense-unit. Then we speak of a compound noun:
The nearest railway station is a mile's distance from our house. Secretary General demanded the seating of People's China in the Security Council. The second World Congress of Partisans of Peace issued an address to the United Nations Organization.
