adjectives indah

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KATA SIFAT ADJECTIVES

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Page 1: Adjectives indah

KATA SIFAT

ADJECTIVES

Page 2: Adjectives indah

The adjective is a modifier that has the

grammatical property of comparison.

It is often identified by special derivational

endings or by special adverbial modifiers that

precede it. Its most usual position is before the

noun it modifies, but it fills other position as well.

ADJECTIVES

Page 3: Adjectives indah

SPECIAL USAGES OF

ADJECTIVES

FUNCTION OF ADJETIVES

DISCUSSION

MARKERS OF ADJECTIVES

TYPES OF ADJECTIVES FORM OF ADJECTIVES

POSITION OF ADJECTIVE

THANKS FOR ATTENTION

Page 4: Adjectives indah

DESCRIPTIVE ADJECTIVES

TYPES OF ADJECTIVES

DETERMINERS

Page 5: Adjectives indah

Determiners consist of a small group of structure words without characteristic form.

1. Articles the, a an

2. Demonstrative adjectives this, plural these

that, plural those

3. Possessive adjectives

a. from pronouns my, your, one’s, etc.

b. from nouns john’s, the girl’s, etc.

4. Numeral adjectives

a. cardinal four, twenty-five. One hundred, etc.

b. ordinal fourth, twenty-fifth, one hundredth, etc.

5. Adjective ofindefinite quantity some, few, all, more, etc.

6. Relative and interrogative adjectives whose, what, which

DETERMINERS

Page 6: Adjectives indah

Descreptive adjective usually indicate an inherent quality (beautiful, intelligent), or physical state such as age, size, colour. Inflectional and derivational endings can be added only to this type of adjective. Some descriptive adjective take the form of :

1. Proper adjectives a catholic cruch, a french dish, a shakespearian play

2. Participials adjectives

a. present participle an interesting book, a disappointing experience, a charming view, a trifling gift.

b. past participle a bored student, a worn tablecloth, a tired house-wife, a spoiled child.

3. Adjective compounds

a. with participles

(1) present participle a good looking girl, a heart-breaking story, a spanish-speaking student, a long suffering widow.

past participle a turned-up nose, a broken-down house, new-born kittens, ready-made clothes.

b. with –ed added to nouns functioning as the second element of a compound. The first element is usually a short adjective absent-minded, ill-tempered, tear stained, far-sighted.

such compounds especially common with nouns that denote parts of the body-left-handed, kind-hearted, blue eyed, barefooted (or barefoot).

DESCRIPTIVE ADJECTIVES

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Adjectives tell us more about a noun. They can:

Describe feelings or qualities: He is a lonely man,They are honest people.

Give nationality or origin: Pierre is French, This clock is German, Our house is Victorian.

Tell more about a thing's characteristics: A wooden table, The knife is sharp.

Tell us about age: He's a young man, My coat is very old.

Tell us about size and measurement: John is a tall man, This is a very long film.

Tell us about color: Paul wore a red shirt, The sunset was crimson and gold.

Tell us about material/what something is made of: It was a wooden table, She wore a cotton dress.

Tell us about shape: A rectangular box, A square envelope.

Express a judgment or a value: A fantastic film, Grammar is boring.

FUNCTION OF ADJECTIVES

Page 8: Adjectives indah

POSITION OF ADJECTIVE

Adjective occur most frequently before the nouns they refer to or after linking verbs.

However, they also appear in several other position, not only in relation to nouns and

verbs, but also in relation to pronouns. All the possible position of adjectives will

therefore be described here.

1. Position of adjectives in relation to nouns (attributive position).

In this section we will be concerned chiefly with the position of single-word

modifiers that precede or follow a noun head.

1. Adjectives preceding, a noun head (pre-position)

2. Adjectives following, a noun head (post-position)

2. Position of adjectives in relation to verbs.

A. after the linking verbs be, seem, appear, look ( as subjective

complements in predicate position).

The boy is tall.

B. after certain verbs and their objects, as objective complements.

the storm has made me uneasy.

all his friends concidered him intelligent.

Page 9: Adjectives indah

C. in the special verb-adjective combinations that express a state hold tight, stand still, lie quiet, break loose, open wide, slam shut.

she held the child tight.

the ship broke loose from its moorings.

3. Position of adjectives in relation to pronouns

A. after the pronoun

he is looking for something new and exciting to do.

B. before the pronoun (only wirh one)

did you buy the green dress or the blue one?

Page 10: Adjectives indah

1. Inflectional form

Determiners do not change their form except for the possessive of nouns and

pronouns used adjectivally (‘s for the singular and ‘for the plural are added)

and the demonstratives, which have separate forms for the plural

(these.those). Descriptive adjectives have special forms only for comparison.

These forms are given below.

2. Derivational form of adjectives

Most adjective derivational suffixes have little semantic content; they merely

serve as part-of-speech indicators. Adjective suffixes are usually added to

nouns or verbs.

FORM OF ADJECTIVES

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Adjectives are signaled by adverbs of degree like very, quite,

rather, extremely (very quite, rather useless, quite pretty).

These adverbs also mark other adverbs.

Adverbs of degree are used with –ing adjectives but not with

participles or with gerunds. Since these two verbal forms occur in

the same position as participial adjectives, the adverbs of degree

help to distinguish the participial adjectives from these other

forms.

MARKERS OF ADJECTIVES

Page 12: Adjectives indah

Some-any

some is used in positive statements, any in negative

statements.

I have some money.

I don’t have any money.

SPECIAL USAGES OF ADJECTIVES

Page 13: Adjectives indah