The qualitative adjective is in full form. Short adjectives

Forms of adjectives

Forms of adjectives

Introduction

1. General characteristics of adjectives

2. Full and short form of adjectives

Conclusion

Bibliography

Introduction

Morphology is a section of grammar that studies the parts of speech and the forms of their change.

Parts of speech are certain lexico-grammatical classes of words that have common semantic, morphological and syntactic properties.

Based on semantic, morphological and syntactic principles, in the Russian language one can distinguish one of the significant parts of speech, such as an adjective. This is a part of speech that denotes the attribute of an object and answers the questions: what? what? whose?

It should be noted that adjectives are qualitative, relative and possessive. Adjectives also have degrees of comparison: comparative and superlative, and differ in forms, i.e. have a short and a long form.

In my test work, I tried to consider in detail the issue of forms of adjectives, their distinctive features and the conditions under which the formation of these forms is possible.

1. General characteristics of adjectives

An adjective is a part of speech that denotes an attribute of an object and answers questions Which? what? whose?

Unlike verbs denoting a characteristic that exists in time ( white sunrise), and nouns denoting a sign of an object or phenomenon, separated from this object, phenomenon (white), adjectives show a constant attribute of a specific object denoted by a noun.

Adjectives have categories of gender, number and case, which are dependent on nouns: tall tree(noun tree refers to the neuter gender, used in the nominative singular; adjective high has the same shapes) tall dream, tall pillar, tall trees(as the categories of nouns change, the categories of adjectives change accordingly).

Adjectives characterizing the pronouns I and you (in the form of different cases), devoid of gender meaning, can acquire independent gender meanings and be the only expressors of these meanings: I, young and talented, am waiting for recognition of success. You, strong and generous, will protect me. They tried to humiliate and insult you, proud and independent.

Adjectives can be qualitative, relative and possessive.

2. Full and short form of adjectives

Qualitative adjectives have full and short forms: fresh-- fresh, cute-- mil.

The short form of relative adjectives is used as a means of expressiveness (usually in artistic speech), for example: These are the strings. As if they were copper and as if they were cast iron.(March.)

Only full forms are used in the definition function. Both full and short forms of adjectives can be used as a predicate: Short night. The night is short. The night is short.

The full and short forms of adjectives in the predicate function differ stylistically: the short forms have a predominantly bookish stylistic overtones, the full forms have a neutral or colloquial tone, for example: And again the soul is poetryfull. (N.) Pupildiligent.

Full adjectives sometimes denote a permanent attribute of an object, while short adjectives sometimes denote a temporary attribute: From now on I know the value of successful and stingy words.(Born) In the forests, in the deserts I will endure the silent ones, full of you, your rocks, your bays, and shine, and shadow, once the talk of the waves.(P.)

In some cases, long forms indicate an absolute attribute of an object that is not associated with any specific conditions of its appearance, and short forms indicate a relative attribute, for example: short skirt-- the skirt is short(not in general, for someone), the door is low-- the door is low(not in general, but in order to bring a closet into it).

Full adjectives can have terminological meaning, but short adjectives cannot: black and red currants; porcini mushrooms etc.

The short form is characterized by a shade of greater categoricalness in the designation of a feature of an object, cf.: Masha is smart. Masha is smart.

With words How And So Only short forms are used: to how beautiful, how fresh the roses were...(I. Myatlev.), with words what kind of guy-- full: What a smart child/

The predicate, expressed by an adjective in full form, does not have the ability of syntactic control: Ivan-- malchick capable. The forest is beautiful. The short form can control dependent words: Ivan is good at mathematics.

The short form can be synonymized with the full form in the instrumental case: was helpful-- was useful, became greedy-- stal greedy.

With ligaments to become, to become, to be The instrumental predicative predominates. When connected be Both a short form and an instrumental predicative of the full form are possible.

When addressed politely to You possible or short form B you are resourceful and smart), or the full form, consistent in gender with the real gender of the person to whom the speech is addressed: You are resourceful and smart. You are resourceful and smart.

Using the full form of an adjective in the plural when addressing one person is a speech error. You cannot say: “You, Ivan Ivanovich, are resourceful and smart.” Necessary: You, Ivan Ivanovich, are resourceful and smart or You, Ivan Ivanovich, are resourceful and smart.

The short form is formed from the stems of full adjectives by adding gender endings in the singular and a plural ending common to all genders.

Historically, the short form is primary. She was more ancient. Long forms were formed from short ones by adding case forms of the demonstrative pronoun to them.

In the Old Russian language there was a special demonstrative pronoun: masculine - i (m), feminine - ga (ya), neuter - k (f). The nominative case of this pronoun disappeared from the language a long time ago, and its indirect cases have been preserved (with changes) and are used in modern language as indirect cases of the pronoun he: his, him, them etc. Thus, in the feminine gender from young+ I happened young, neuter from young + e happened young. In the masculine gender, at the end of short adjectives, a special sound was pronounced, similar to [o] and depicted in writing with the letter ъ: from odds young+ OAnd happened young. In a similar way, from merging with pronouns, forms of other cases were obtained: from mloda+ his happened young from young+ to him it turned out m young etc.

At first, short and full adjectives were declined and changed according to gender and number: short adjectives were declined as nouns of the 1st (female) or 2nd (m. and middle) declension, complete ones - as demonstrative pronouns that, that, that or all, all.

Both short and full adjectives were used as modifiers, that is, they agreed with the noun they referred to in gender, number and case. This is evidenced by some phrases that include case forms of multiple adjectives, for example: on bare feet, from young to old, his fuss flared up, in broad daylight, across the world, as well as >chiya and adverbial expressions formed from such aiming words: I'll say hello, red-hot, white-hot, white-hot, left, a. Traces of indirect cases of short forms of adjectives are preserved in works of oral folk art: The young man finally turned to the red sun; declared the king's will; He speaks sweetly, as if a river is babbling.(P.)

Short adjectives could act as predicates in Old Russian; full forms in this role began to be used no earlier than the 15th century.

In Old Russian, short adjectives are used with an indefinite noun denoting an unknown or first-mentioned object, and full adjectives are used with a definite noun denoting a known object, for example: good sister- this is some kind of sister and the one who is mentioned for the first time, and good sister- this is a certain, famous sister.

The category of definiteness-indeterminacy turned out to be unstable in the Old Russian language, and short adjectives began to be preserved only as a nominal part of a compound predicate. Since predicates are connected with subjects, which are always in the nominative case, then predicates expressed by short adjectives began to be used only in one case, that is, they began to decline.

Short forms are not formed from some adjectives, mainly those qualitative adjectives that are relative in origin, as indicated by their word-formation connection with nouns. These include:

a) adjectives with suffix -sk-: brotherly, heroic, heroic, rustic, friendly, comradely;

b) adjectives with suffix -oe- (-ev-): combative, strong-willed, businesslike, advanced;

c) adjectives with suffix -n-: near, upper, spring, evening, internal, distant, ancient, autumn, last, color;

d) verbal adjectives with suffix -l-, meaning “being in some state”: backward, frozen, saggy, shabby;

e) adjectives denoting the colors of animals: bay, ne-(ey, savrasy;

f) adjectives that denote color not directly, but through its relationship to the subject: pink(cf. rose), coffee(cf. coffee), cream(cf. cream), lilac(cf. lilac);

g) adjectives with the meaning of subjective assessment: feisty, hefty, unamiable.

Some adjectives are used only in short form: much, must, love, right, glad.

It is necessary to pay attention to some cases of the formation of short adjectives:

a) a short form of the masculine gender with a base on a sibilant that does not have a sibilant at the end s fragrant, beautiful;

b) at the base of some short masculine adjectives, fluent vowels appear between consonants one: strong-- strong, beautiful-- beautiful;

c) there is so much in the short form of the adjective n, how much in full form: valuable-- valuable, valuable-- valuable, valuable-- valuable; in the masculine between nn there is a fluent e: valuable -- valuable, extraordinary-- extraordinary;

d) from an adjective worthy a short form is formed worthy;

e) for adjectives ending in -ny, There may be short form options: immoral-- immoral And immoral. Adjectives that are formed from nouns with a stem ending in two or more consonants have a short form in - en: impeccable - impeccable, painful - painful, feminine - feminine, ambiguous - ambiguous, etc.

Relative adjectives in literary language are never short: folk, folk, folk, possessive adjectives ending in - in, - ov (- ev), - y, on the contrary, are not complete: aunt's house, grandfather's story, teacher's briefcase, fox tail.

Short adjectives have three types of stress.

They are shown in the table:

Fixed stress based

Adjectives with non-derivative stems

Kipucha, bubbly, bubbly, bubbly;

Curly, curly, curly, curly;

Useful, useful, useful, useful;

Submissive, submissive, submissive, submissive.

Movable stress moving from the stem to the ending in the feminine form

One-syllable and two-syllable adjectives with a non-derivative base and adjectives with a derived base with suffixes - ok (- ёк), -к-.

White, white, white, white;

Bos, bosa, boso, barefoot;

Fast, fast, fast, fast;

Cheerful, cheerful, cheerful, cheerful.

Emphasis on ending

Hot, hot, hot;

Must, must, must;

Light, light, easy;

Small, small, little;

Tricky, tricky, tricky;

Equal, equal, equal.

Conclusion

In my test, I looked at two forms of adjectives: full and short. Thus, I would like to highlight the main points:

Ш Qualitative adjectives have full and short forms

Ш The short form of relative adjectives is used as a means of expressiveness

Ш Only full forms are used in the definition function

Ш Short forms have a predominantly bookish stylistic connotation, while long forms have a neutral or colloquial tone.

Ш Full adjectives sometimes denote a permanent attribute of an object, and short adjectives sometimes denote a temporary attribute

Ш Full adjectives can have terminological meaning, but short ones cannot.

Ш The short form is formed from the stems of full adjectives by adding gender endings in the singular and a plural ending common to all genders.

Ш Historically, the short form is primary.

Ш Relative adjectives in literary language are never short

Ш Short adjectives have three types of stress.

Ш Fixed stress based on

Ш Emphasis on ending

Ш Movable stress, moving from the stem to the ending in the feminine form.

Bibliography

1. Kovadlo L. Ya., Starichenok V. D. 1750 exam questions, assignments and answers in the Russian language for schoolchildren and applicants to universities. - M.: Bustard, 2001.

2. Rosenthal D. E. A manual on the Russian language for applicants to universities. - M., 1994.

3. Russian language: Theory and practice. - Minsk, 1995.

4. Russian language: Encyclopedia. - M., 1998.

5. Shansky I.M. Russian language excellent. - Rostov n/d, 1998.

Qualitative adjectives
Only qualitative adjectives have a full and short form: good - excellent, excellent - excellent, fresh - fresh, sweet - sweet.

The short form of relative adjectives is usually used as a means of expressiveness in artistic speech.

Let's give an example: These are the same strings. They look like copper and like cast iron.
Only full forms are used in the definition function. However, both full and short forms of adjectives can be used as a predicate: Short day. The day is short. The day is short.

Change by case retain only some adjectives in folklore expressions.

Let's give an example: on bare feet.

In a sentence, short adjectives are almost always the nominal part of a compound nominal predicate.
Let's give an example: He is smart; He is stately; He's cheerful.

Relative adjectives have only full form.
Let's give an example: Iron, today's, comfortable.

Possessive adjectives with the suffixes "in"/"yn", "ov"/"ev", "iy" - in the singular form of the nominative case they usually have only a short form.
For example: Dad, daddy, daddy, daddy; wolfish, wolfish, wolfish, wolfish.

In indirect cases such adjectives have:
or a short form: father's, wolf's;
or the full form: father's, wolf's.

The endings of short forms coincide with the endings of nouns.
Let's give an example: spring - daddy's; spring - daddy's.

Qualitative adjectives usually have two forms: full and short.
Let's give an example: Cheerful - cheerful, handsome - handsome.

Full adjectives change by gender, singular, number and case.
Short qualitative adjectives answer the questions what? what? what? what are they? and change by gender, singular and numbers.
Here's an example: Happy, happy, happy, happy.

Declension of adjectives
The declension of adjectives, in comparison with the declension of nouns, is more unified. In the nominative singular case, adjectives have a gender difference: the case endings of the masculine, feminine and neuter gender are different. In the plural, adjectives have no gender differences, and the case endings for all three genders are the same.

In modern Russian there are three types of declension of adjectives:
1. Declension of qualitative and relative adjectives such as red, gold, summer, blue.
2. Declension of possessive adjectives such as bratnin, aunt, fathers, friends.
3. Declension of adjectives starting with “ii” such as wolf, bear.

The most productive is the first type of declension, which, according to the nature of the last consonant of the stem, has three varieties: a hard version of the declension (rich, stone), a soft version of the declension (autumn, blue) and mixed: a) with a base on sibilant, b) with a base on d , k, x and v) with a base on c (pale-faced, small, smooth, long, quiet).

For adjectives with a stem on a hard consonant, the stress during declension is either only on the stem (kind, red), or only on the ending (sick, dumb).

For adjectives with a stem on a soft consonant and adjectives with a stem on c, when inflected, the stress always falls only on the stem (short, autumn, blue).

Adjectives with a base on a hard consonant in the instrumental case of the feminine singular have a double ending: “oy” (“ey”) and “oy” (“ey”). Their use depends on the style of speech: in poetic language the ending -oy ("ee") is more common, which is due to the laws of poetic style (rhythm, rhyme, etc.), for example: I pass through a field along a narrow boundary, overgrown with porridge and tenacious quinoa.

Possessive adjectives ending in “in”, “ov” (“ev”) have a mixed type of declension: part of the case endings of these adjectives coincides with the endings of the hard declension of qualitative-relative adjectives, in separate cases the endings of nouns are used (in the nominative and accusative cases of all genders and numbers, in the genitive and dative cases, masculine and neuter singular).

Possessive adjectives with the suffix “in” in modern Russian are increasingly declined like full adjectives with a base on a hard consonant (not sister, sister, but sister, sister, etc.).

Possessive adjectives ending in “rank” (bratnin, muzhnin) are inflected in the same way as adjectives ending in “in”.

Possessive adjectives in -niy (filial, filial) are declined like full qualitative-relative adjectives of the soft variant of declension (for example, neighbor).

Possessive adjectives formed with the suffix -j- (wolf, wolf, wolf) have both full and short endings: wolf, wolf, etc., wolf, wolf, etc.

Adjectives that are used as nouns are declined according to the general rules for declension of adjectives.

Spelling case forms of adjectives:
1. Adjectives have endings that are similar to the endings of the question word what: with an excellent (what?) mood, about a beautiful (what?) bag, and the like.
Always remember that after hard consonants the vowels s, o, u are written, and after soft consonants the vowels are written - i, e, yu.
Let's give an example: long stockings - blue stockings, in a long stocking - in a blue stocking; in a black bag - in a yellow bag.
2. Spelling o and e after sibilants and c at the end of adjectives always depends on stress: under stress - o, without stress - e, big garden - handsome boy.
3. In the nominative case of the singular masculine gender, full adjectives in the stressed position have the ending -ой, in the unstressed case - “й”, “и”.
nightmare - blue ocean, early reception.
4. In all forms of possessive adjectives with the suffix “ii”, except for the masculine singular form of the nominative case, a soft sign is written.
Wolfish, wolfish, wolfish, wolfish.
5. In short adjectives, a soft sign is not written after hissing ones.
Burning - burning, mighty - mighty.

Qualitative adjectives have a constant feature - they have full and short forms. This article describes in detail the types of relationships between the two forms and provides illustrative examples for securing the material.

What are the forms of adjectives?

In the Russian language, there are full and short forms of adjectives. This grammatical feature is constant and is characteristic only of qualitative adjectives:

  • Full adjectives– attributive, inflected forms (change according to gender, number, cases), neutral in meaning. In sentences they are most often used as a definition. Examples of full adjectives: dry, cold, red, neat.
  • Short adjectives– predicative, indeclinable forms (change only by gender and number, not indeclinable by cases), differ in book meaning. In sentences, as a rule, a nominal predicate appears. Examples of short adjectives: distant, young, white, meek.

Full and short adjectives are studied at school in the 5th grade.

Types of relationships between full and short forms of adjectives

Not all words of a given part of speech have full and short forms of adjectives. Based on the presence (or absence) of this grammatical feature, adjectives are divided into three groups:

  • Adjectives that have both full and short forms (good - good, cheerful - cheerful, fresh - fresh, smart - smart). Short forms are formed by adding endings to the adjective stem -a (s), -o (s), -s (s) And zero (cute - sweet, strong - strong).
  • Adjectives that have only the full form. These include – adjectives with evaluation suffixes (tall, green), qualitative adjectives formed from relative (coffee, brown, milk) naming the colors of animals (bay, brown) and non-derivative adjectives (alien, former).
  • Adjectives that have only a short form (too small, necessary, much, dear).

TOP 1 articlewho are reading along with this

The adjective is one of the main ones used by its speakers constantly. It has a number of indicators, so before answering the question of how an adjective changes, it is necessary to clarify what exactly should be understood by this part of speech.

The term “adjective” appeared in the Russian language quite a long time ago, and it was derived from the Latin word adjectivum, which translated means “adding.” That is why the lexical meaning of the word “adjective” should be considered “a name that is attached to a noun.”

In general, an adjective denotes a lexico-grammatical class of word forms that denote a non-procedural attribute of an object. Lexical meaning in this case is expressed using inflectional categories. Adjectives in a sentence have their own syntactic function - definition; in particularly complex cases they are a compound nominal predicate.

Adjective: three in one

Speaking about the adjective, it is worth noting three understandings of this term. According to the first, this part of speech should include adjectives themselves, adjective pronouns, participles and ordinal numbers. The lexical meaning of these words (a feature of the subject) is supplemented with new shades. This point of view is called a broad understanding of the adjective.

There is a formal position of the moderate type, in which only adjectives themselves and ordinal numbers are included under adjectives. This point of view was popular in the 60-70s of the 20th century, until it gave way to a broad understanding, actively lobbied by Russian Grammar-80.

With a narrow understanding of the adjective name, only adjectives themselves are included in it. Many linguists prefer to adhere to this approach, since only it takes into account all the features with the help of which a particular part of speech is distinguished. It is on the basis of this point of view that the adjective is analyzed today.

How does an adjective change?

The adjective has a number of morphological categories with the help of which it can be changed if necessary. All these categories are dependent on other parts of speech; the ending of an adjective is a universal morpheme that can indicate inflectional categories.

Adjectives change according to gender, number and case, and when the word becomes plural, the gender disappears as unnecessary. Most often, the inflectional categories of an adjective can be clarified using its ending in combination with the ending of a noun. Sometimes it happens that an adjective is used with and at the end it is not possible to obtain complete information about the word. In this case, the meaning of the gender, number and case of the noun will depend on the ending of the adjective. The number of the adjective plays an important role here, since it affects all indicators at once.

Short and long forms of adjectives

Most adjectives have a short and a long form. During the existence of the Old Church Slavonic (Old Russian) language, short forms had priority, but now the situation has changed exactly the opposite.

Adjectives in their full form are most often placed before a noun, in which case they play the role of a determiner in a sentence. If the full adjective appears after a noun, it is most often a nominal part of a compound nominal predicate. If there is no verb in the sentence, the adjective takes on the role of the predicate.

Most often they are located after the noun, in this case they play the role of the nominal part of a compound nominal predicate. If a sentence has a predicate expressed by a verb, a short adjective can play the function of a separate agreed definition.

Short forms of adjectives (qualitative)

Some qualitative adjectives have retained their short form; these are remnants of the active use of this phenomenon in the Old Russian language. These forms usually denote temporary features that may be applicable to a particular situation, in addition, they can convey a softened categorical assessment of a particular feature.

The short form is formed using the stems of full adjectives, to which gender endings should be added. When forming short masculine adjectives, an alternation of the letters “o” and “e” with a zero sound may appear; this phenomenon is a consequence of the fall of the reduced ones.

It is important to be able to distinguish short forms from truncated adjectives, which are actively used in folklore and fiction. Short adjectives can only be qualitative and change only in gender and number; they are most often used in postposition in relation to a noun.

Adjective categories

To understand how an adjective changes, it is necessary to touch upon its lexical and grammatical categories. Qualitative adjectives can denote the qualities of people, objects and animals, color characteristics, and also give a general assessment of any phenomenon discussed in the sentence.

Relative adjectives are distinguished by the fact that they express the attribute of an object indirectly, through their relationship to an object or some action. They are used to indicate attitudes toward persons, animals, objects, actions, concepts, places, times and numbers. Lexical meaning is conveyed using special suffixes.

Possessive adjectives are the most difficult category. In the broad sense of the word, it includes adjectives with possessive suffixes, in a narrow sense - a part of speech must simultaneously have two characteristics - a suffix and an individual affiliation with a person or object.

How to analyze an adjective?

Morphological analysis of an adjective is a fairly simple procedure that can be completed in a few minutes. The analysis scheme works the same for both school and university levels, so it will not cause any difficulties or additional hassle. If necessary, you can consult linguistic reference books.

In the analysis, it is necessary to indicate: the word form, whether the word form belongs to the part of speech, the categorical meaning, the initial form + a question to it, and a semantic question. Next, you need to indicate all lexical and grammatical indicators and the type of declension (with indicators). For qualitative adjectives, you will need to indicate comparatives and short forms (with evidence in the form of indicators). Next, it is necessary to note by what nominal indicators the adjective agrees with number, case), and indicate its syntactic function in the sentence.

Unstressed endings of adjectives

Quite often a situation arises when it is very difficult to check, since it is unstressed. In this case, you will need to use a whole series of questions (which one? which one? which one? which one? which ones?). You should also remember about exceptions - adjectives ending in “-y”, “-e”, “-ya”, “-iy”, in most forms they have a soft sign before the ending: rabbit, rabbit, rabbit.

The exception is the nominative and accusative singular masculine forms. If the adjective was formed from the name of a month, the soft sign will be preserved: July - July.

How is an adjective learned?

Previously, the deadline for learning the adjective (3rd grade) did not suit everyone, which is why children today learn about parts of speech much earlier than previous generations. An adjective is much easier to learn because it is closely related to another part of speech - a noun, and even has similar grammatical indicators.

To learn how an adjective changes, you need to make every effort in class and listen carefully to your teacher. However, if a child accidentally missed a lesson and it is now very difficult for him to catch up, he can open any reference book from a large amount of scientific literature and find the answer to the question that interests him. The answer in this case may not always be correct, and this must be taken into account when searching.

In the university format, the adjective is studied much more deeply, but a small number of hours are provided for its development, which will help the student repeat only a basic understanding of this part of speech. However, university students have access to libraries and can easily and quickly find the information they need.

Words denoting the characteristics of an object and answering the questions “which?” and “whose?” in Russian they are called adjectives. The name speaks for itself - this is what attached to something, namely to another word - to a noun. Without it, an explicit or implied noun, an adjective cannot exist at all. Otherwise, it loses the meaning of its presence in a sentence and can even turn into a noun itself (cf.: blind(Which?) old man– adj. and sat (who?) blind– noun).

Accordingly, with a change in the defined word, the dependent word will adapt to it, assimilating its morphemic characteristics. This is expressed by endings. Adjectives always have the same gender, number and case as the noun with which they are related in meaning.

Therefore, in order not to make a mistake in the spelling of the ending of an adjective, you should:

  1. find the noun it refers to (attached);
  2. put a question from a qualified noun to an adjective. The end of the question will indicate the correct ending for the adjective; For the most part, they are consonant: weather(which?) warm; morning(which?) sunny; songs(which?) quiet; growth(which one?) high; branches(which ones?) thin);
  3. At the same time, we must remember that the question “which one?” it is impossible to check the endings of adjectives of the initial form (adjectives in m. r. singular. h. I./V. p.).
    In these cases:
    • the ending is written under the accent -Ouch (pencil(m. r. unit h. I. p.) (which one?) color);
    • without accent - -y/y (pencil(Which?) sharp, blue).
    In addition to those mentioned, adjectives also have other variable features:
    • degree of comparison;
    • full or short form.
Both of them are valid only for qualitative adjectives!

What are qualitative adjectives?
According to their meaning, all adjectives are divided into three categories.

  1. High quality. They answer the question “which one?” And indicate the quality of objects: color ( yellow Red), size ( big, small), weight ( heavy, small), character traits ( funny, gloomy), age ( young, old), taste qualities ( bitter, sour). You can easily find antonyms for most of them ( big – small, sharp – dull) or synonyms ( big – large, huge, enormous);
  2. Relative. They also answer the question “which one?”, but define an object in relation to another object: its location ( street flashlight, school yard), material ( paper snake, silk tape), purpose ( ski costume, shoe brush), relation to time ( evening cool, early dinner);
  3. Possessive. The only ones answer the question “whose?”, since characterize an object by its belonging to any living creature (mom's apron, fox tail, Sashin scream).
Qualitative adjectives are significantly different from the rest. They alone can:
  • form a short form, answering the question “what?”, ( high - high, bitter - bitter);
  • show signs of objects to a greater or lesser extent ( high – higher – even higher – highest – highest).
The strengthening of the attribute, as can be seen from the example, is increasing: from the initial, positive, it takes the form of comparative and superlative degrees; which can be expressed in different ways:
  • simple forms using suffixes: higher, highest;
  • compound forms using additional words: more (less, most, very, most...) high.
All adjectives are declined by case, number and gender (in singular). And only high-quality ones have exceptions.
  1. Short adjectives do not decline! That is, they do not change by cases, but change only by numbers and genders (in singular): hungry, hungry, hungry.
  2. In general, qualitative adjectives in a comparatively simple form do not change in any way ( higher, lower, narrower, wider, faster...) and in the compound superlative built on its basis ( above - above all).
Other qualitative adjectives are declined in the same way as relative adjectives. Depending on the last consonant at the base, their endings can be hard or soft ( -a-i, -o-e, -u-yu, -s-i).

Also, adjectives agree with the noun in animation if the noun is in the V. plural form. h., and for the masculine gender - in units. hours (cf.: I see beautiful ones(what?) shoes and I see handsome ones(which?) girls).


Possessive adjectives are inflected differently. Their type of declination is called mixed. The set of endings there is special. They won't necessarily be in tune. Moreover, in the declension of adjectives with the suffix -iii- and adjectives with suffixes -yn-/-in- or -ov-/-ev- there are some differences.


For possessive adjectives with a suffix -iii- Be sure to write a soft sign in the middle of the word ( dog, sable, mustelid, fox...); in all forms except the initial one (m.r. unit h. I./V. p.), in it the endings will be zero ( hare_, fox_, cat_, sable_).

The categories of adjectives do not have clear boundaries, which allows them to move from one to another. Such changes depend on the context, usually when used in figurative meanings. So possessive adjective fox(whose?) Nora becomes relative in case fox(which one? What is it made of?) fur coat, and the relative adjective iron(which one? what is it made of?) tap turns into quality iron(what kind? i.e. strong) patience.

And finally, there are some special adjectives for colors ( beige, khaki, indigo, etc.), nationalities ( Khanty, Mansi, Urdu...) and clothing styles ( corrugated, flared, mini...), as well as words (weight) Gross Net, (hour) peak, which have their own characteristics: they are always unchangeable and are always placed after the noun ( beige jackets, flared skirt).

Some qualitative adjectives in modern language have only short forms, for example: glad, must, much, which are also unchangeable.