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"specificative".
One and the same adjective, irrespective of its being "relative" or
"qualitative", can be used either in the evaluative function or in the specificative
function. For instance,
the adjective
good
is basically qualitative. On the other
hand, when employed as a grading term in teaching, i.e. a
term forming part of the
marking scale together with the grading terms
bad, satisfactory, excellent
, it
acquires the said specificative value; in other words, it becomes a specificative, not
an evaluative unit in the grammatical sense. Conversely, the adjective
wooden
is
basically relative, but when used in the broader meaning "expressionless" or
"awkward" it acquires an evaluative force and, consequently, can presuppose a
greater or lesser degree ("amount") of the denoted properly in the corresponding
referent.
Thus, the introduced distinction between the evaluative and specificative
uses
of adjectives, in the long run, emphasizes the fact that the morphological
category of comparison (comparison degrees) is potentially represented in the
whole class of adjectives and is constitutive for it.
Adjectives that characterize the referent of the noun directly are termed
inherent, those that do not are termed non-inherent.
eg.
an old member of the club – the member of the club is old
Most
adjectives are inherent, and it is especially uncommon for dynamic
adjectives to be other than inherent.
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