A MaargX UPSC Complete Grammar Guide | Rules, Examples & Practice Questions
An adjective is a word that modifies, qualifies, or describes a noun or pronoun. It gives additional information about the noun or pronoun by answering questions such as: What kind? Which one? How many? How much? Whose? An adjective narrows down the reference of the noun by attributing a quality, quantity, or identity to it.
📄 Download PDFAn adjective is a word that modifies, qualifies, or describes a noun or pronoun. It gives additional information about the noun or pronoun by answering questions such as: What kind? Which one? How many? How much? Whose? An adjective narrows down the reference of the noun by attributing a quality, quantity, or identity to it.
Key insight: An adjective always relates to a noun or pronoun — directly (attributive position) or through a linking verb (predicative position). Without this relationship, the word is not functioning as an adjective.
| Position | Pattern & Example |
|---|---|
| Attributive (before noun) | The tall man arrived. │ She wore a red dress. |
| Predicative (after linking verb) | The man is tall. │ The dress looks red. |
| Post-positive (after noun) | Something unusual happened. │ The president elect spoke. |
| Absolute (standalone, subject-less) | Exhausted, he collapsed on the sofa. │ Pale and trembling, she read the letter. |
Descriptive adjectives express a quality or state of a noun. They are the most common type and answer the question 'What kind?'
Proper adjectives are derived from proper nouns (names of specific people, places, or things). They are always capitalised.
Quantitative adjectives indicate the quantity of a noun — either as an exact number or an approximate amount. They answer 'How many?' or 'How much?'
Numeral adjectives specify the exact number or order of nouns. They are classified into cardinal (one, two, three…), ordinal (first, second, third…), and multiplicative (double, triple…).
Demonstrative adjectives point out specific nouns. The four demonstrative adjectives in English are: this, that, these, those.
Interrogative adjectives are used with nouns to ask questions. The three interrogative adjectives are: which, what, whose.
Possessive adjectives show ownership or relationship. They are: my, your, his, her, its, our, their, one's.
Distributive adjectives refer to members of a group individually or collectively. Key distributive adjectives: each, every, either, neither, any.
Indefinite adjectives refer to nouns in a non-specific way. Common indefinite adjectives: some, any, few, many, several, all, both, more, most, other, another, less.
The word 'what' functions as an exclamatory adjective when used to express strong emotion before a noun.
Most descriptive adjectives can be graded to show degrees of quality: positive, comparative, and superlative.
| Positive | Comparative | Superlative |
|---|---|---|
| tall | taller | tallest |
| beautiful | more beautiful | most beautiful |
| good | better | best |
| bad | worse | worst |
| far | farther / further | farthest / furthest |
| many / much | more | most |
| little | less | least |
| late | later / latter | latest / last |
When multiple adjectives appear before a noun, English follows a strict sequence. A memory device for this is DOSACOMP:
| Order & Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| D — Determiner | a, the, my, this, three |
| O — Opinion/Observation | lovely, awful, beautiful, strange |
| S — Size | large, tiny, enormous, small |
| A — Age | old, young, ancient, new |
| C — Colour | red, blue, golden, pale |
| O — Origin | French, Chinese, African, Nordic |
| M — Material | wooden, silver, cotton, plastic |
| P — Purpose/Qualifier | sleeping (bag), running (shoes) |
Some adjectives can function as nouns when preceded by 'the'. These refer to a whole class of people sharing that quality.
DOSACOMP — Determiner, Opinion, Size, Age, Colour, Origin, Material, Purpose. Remember: 'Dogs Often Sleep And Chew On Messy Pillows'.
Few vs. A Few: Think 'A' = Affirmative. 'A few' is positive (some help arrived); 'few' alone is negative (barely any arrived).
Comparatives for Two, Superlative for Three+: 'Com-PAIR-ative' contains the word PAIR — a pair means two.
Absolute Adjectives: If the adjective means 'complete in itself' (unique, perfect, dead, infinite), it needs no comparison. Ask: 'Can something be MORE infinite?' If it sounds absurd, it's absolute.
Its vs. It's: 'It's' = It is. Substitute 'it is' in the sentence — if it works, use it's; if it doesn't, use its.
| ✗ INCORRECT | ✓ CORRECT |
|---|---|
| She is more elder than me. | She is elder than me. / She is older than me. |
| He is the most unique designer in the team. | He is a unique designer in the team. |
| This is the best of the two options. | This is the better of the two options. |
| The climate of Chennai is hotter than Mumbai. | The climate of Chennai is hotter than that of Mumbai. |
| She wore a silk beautiful old dress. | She wore a beautiful old silk dress. |
| Each of the students were present. | Each of the students was present. |
| Neither of the answers are correct. | Neither of the answers is correct. |
| The book is more cheaper than expected. | The book is cheaper than expected. |
| It's fur was shiny and smooth. | Its fur was shiny and smooth. |
| The poors deserve government support. | The poor deserve government support. |
A quick-revision reference of all rules covered in this document.
Each sentence below contains one adjective-related error. Identify the error, correct it, and briefly state the grammar rule being violated.
Choose the most grammatically precise option to fill in the blank. More than one option may seem correct at first glance — read all choices carefully before deciding.
Only ONE sentence in each group is grammatically correct. Identify it and be prepared to explain why the other three are wrong.
These questions demand deep grammatical analysis, clause identification, paragraph correction, rewriting for precision, and reasoning through competing rules.
Each sentence below contains one adjective-related error. Identify the error, correct it, and briefly state the grammar rule being violated.
Choose the most grammatically precise option to fill in the blank.
Only ONE sentence in each group is grammatically correct.
These questions demand deep grammatical analysis, clause identification, paragraph correction, rewriting for precision, and reasoning through competing rules.
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