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Communication Skills-II




                    notes
                                          Example: 1.   He met two ladies yesterday.
                                                 2.  I need several envelopes and some paper.
                                   Demonstrative adjectives point out nouns and are followed by the nouns which they point
                                   out.

                                          Example: 1.   this house
                                                 2.  those people

                                   interrogative adjectives ask questions and come before a noun.

                                          Example: 1.   Which door _____ ?
                                                 2.  Whose shoes ____ ?

                                   Indefinite Adjectives

                                   An  indefinite  adjective  is  similar  to  an  indefinite  pronoun,  except  that  it  modifies  a  noun,
                                   pronoun, or noun phrase, as in the following sentences.

                                          Example: Many people believe that corporations are under-taxed.

                                     The indefinite adjective “many” modifies the noun “people” and the noun phrase “many
                                     people” is the subject of the sentence.
                                     I will send you any mail that arrives after you have moved to Shivnagar.
                                     The indefinite adjective “any” modifies the noun “mail” and the noun phrase “any mail” is
                                     the direct object of the compound verb “will send.”
                                     They found a few goldfish floating belly up in the swan pound.
                                     In this example the indefinite adjective modifies the noun “goldfish” and the noun phrase
                                     is the direct object of the verb “found”.

                                   Degrees and their formation
                                   We even have a name for each of these forms of degree: positive, comparative, and superlative. Let’s
                                   meet the whole gang.
                                   Positive degree: The base form of the adjective or adverb. It does not show comparison.
                                   Comparative degree: The form an adjective or adverb takes to compare two things.

                                   Superlative degree: The form an adjective or adverb takes to compare three or more things.

                                                   table 10.1: comparative levels of adjectives and adverbs
                                         Part of speech      Positive        comparative       superlative
                                       Adjective        low               lower            lowest
                                       Adjective        big               bigger           biggest
                                       Adjective        fat               fatter           fattest
                                       Adverb           highly            more highly      most highly
                                       Adverb           widely            more widely      most widely
                                       Adverb           easily            more easily      most easily




          138                              lovely Professional university
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