Most adjectives take comparative and superlative morphology: -er/-est or the words more and most. (For more on what it is that determines which a word can take, see this document.)
So now we already have a handy test for adjectives.
Test 1 for Adjectives: Does the word have a comparative and superlative form?
small, smaller, smallest
curious, more curious, most curious
ugly, uglier, ugliest
difficult, more difficult, most difficult
There's a lesson on TeachLing on the comparative and superlative forms of adjectives. (I should note that many adverbs also have comparative and superlative forms: I run faster than you. I'll come back to adverbs in some later post.)
Now, some adjectives cannot be compared since they are not gradable, so it might be weird to say
This chair is more wooden than that one.since you’re either wooden or you’re not, married or not, and so on. Sometimes, however, we use these forms in certain situations and they do make sense. If someone said that one chair is more wooden than another, what might that mean?
He is more married than she is.
Gradability is also relevant for a second test for adjectives, their ability to be used with a degree word, like very.
Test 2 for Adjectives: Can the word by preceded by a degree word?
Degree words (also sometimes called intensifiers) are a part of speech (sometimes misclassified as adverbs, though they have different syntactic and morphological behavior – I’ll come back to that at some point) that, well, express degree, so words like very, so, too, more, less, quite, almost, kind of, rather, pretty, sort of, or extremely.
Again, as with the comparative and superlative forms for adjectives, there are some adjectives that resist a word like very since they are already opposite ends on a scale – complete/incomplete, married/not married, wooden/non wooden, pregnant/not pregnant. Does very work with these adjectives? We do use it that way, so you might want to have your students explain what something like "very complete" might mean and when it might be used (rather than just saying "don't say that" or "we can't say that").
Test 3 for Adjectives: Can the word follow a linking verb?
Adjectives occur in two basic positions: before a noun (the furry cat) and following a linking verb (the cat is furry). Linking verbs do just that – “link” to the subject noun phrase by renaming it. Linking verbs include sense verbs like taste, smell, feel, as well as verbs of “existence” like be, remain, seem, appear, grow, or become.
Jojo is tall.So there you go. Three easy tests to use to verify whether a word is an adjective. Anywhere where there is uncertainty or disagreement among your students provides the perfect opportunity to do analysis, some figuring out. If you’re uncertain, that simply means something interesting is going on. One place where there may be some debate is figuring out whether participles are adjectives or verbs. So here’s a document and exercise on that. Another place for disagreement may be with color terms. And a third is with noun modifiers of nouns, so here’s a link to a document on that.
The cat remains skittish.
The toast tastes burned.
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