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Can you use an adjective after a noun?
A postpositive adjective or postnominal adjective is an adjective that is placed after the noun or pronoun that it modifies, as in noun phrases such as attorney general, queen regnant, or all matters financial.
How do you use adjectives and nouns in a sentence?
English often uses nouns as adjectives – to modify other nouns. For example, a car that people drive in races is a race car. A car with extra power or speed is a sports car. Nouns that modify other nouns are called adjectival nouns or noun modifiers.
Can we put adjectives in any order before a noun?
The paragraph concerned the order of adjectives – if you’re using more than one adjective before a noun, they are subject to a certain hierarchy. The rule is that multiple adjectives are always ranked accordingly: opinion, size, age, shape, colour, origin, material, purpose.
Can an adjective be followed by a preposition?
Prepositions can sometimes appear after adjectives to complete or elaborate on the ideas or emotions the adjective describes. The preposition always comes directly after the adjective and is typically followed by a noun or gerund to form a prepositional phrase.
Do adjectives come before or after nouns?
An adjective can appear before or after the noun it modifies. In the typical sequence, an adjective appears before a noun: the full moon, an ordinary evening, this distressing event. However, an adjective can also appear post-position—that is, following the noun it modifies: the sky so blue, the man possessed, a land unexplored.
What is the position of adjectives in a sentence?
Position of adjectives Most adjectives can appear before a noun as part of a noun phrase, placed after determiners or numbers if there are any, and immediately before the noun, e.g. She had a beautiful smile. He bought two brown bread rolls.
How do you use adjectives in attributive position?
In attributive position, an adjective comes before the noun it modifies. She is a nice girl. She married a rich businessman. In predicative position, an adjective goes after the verb. She is nice. He looked upset. While attributive adjectives usually go before the nouns, a few can be used after nouns.
What comes after the word ‘something’?
After something, everything etc. Adjectives come after words like something, everything, anything, nothing, somebody, anywhere etc. I would like to go somewhere quiet. (NOT I would like to go quiet somewhere.) I heard something interesting today. (NOT I heard interesting something today.) In most expressions of measurement adjectives come…