I’ve
been asked a few times recently about adjective phrases and feel it’s about
time I tried to unpick the subject knowledge surrounding these.
We
are very familiar with using adjectives or strings of adjectives in front of a
noun to create a noun phrase and, in this type of phrase, the noun is the head
word. For example, ‘the lazy, luminous, long-tailed lizard’ contains the
adjectives ‘lazy’, ‘luminous’
and ‘long-tailed’ and these are
pre-modifying the head word in the phrase which is the noun ‘lizard’.
Adjective
phrases are phrases where the adjective is the head of the phrase, as in the
following examples:
The
princess was very beautiful.
The
policeman’s hunch proved entirely correct.
The
decorators painted the room bright pink.
The
strong wind made the children quite crazy.
These
phrases fill the complement ‘slots’ in a sentence and provide information about
the subject or object in the sentence.
Of course, this complement slot can also be filled by a single
adjective: The princess was beautiful.
Complements
are one of the five sentence/clause elements in our language and are probably
the least familiar to primary teachers. The
sentence elements are as follows:
S
– subject
V
– verb
O
– object (which can be direct or indirect)
A
– adverbial
C
– complement
Complements
do not have to be filled by adjectives/adjective phrases; they can also be
nouns/noun phrases. In the sentence ‘He became
a doctor.’ the noun phrase highlighted is a
subject complement as it is completing the information about the subject ‘he’. This gives the structure S V C.
However
complements do need to be used with a particular group of verbs, which are often
referred to as ‘link’ verbs or copulas.
The verbs which can most commonly be used as link verbs are be, seem appear (look), feel, get, keep,
become, turn. Often the verbs which
describe our senses (look, smell, sound,
taste, feel) can be used as link verbs.
If
children know verbs as ‘doing words’, these link verbs are often the ones they
have difficulty with, as it is harder to understand that they ‘do’
anything. They more commonly express a
state of being. So really, it’s best to
be clear with children and use the correct terminology ‘verb’ – it’s shorter
than ‘doing word’ in any event!
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