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Anonymous Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

adjectives to denote people, a thing and use as a pronoun

Hi,

I think an adjective that is preceded by the definite article "the" can allude to people, a thing or it can be used as a pronoun.

eg,
as a pronoun? What kind of beer/what beer would you like to have? The best as I usually have it. You know what it is. I come here everyday.
refer a thing? What kind of car do you favor? The luxurious fits my taste for cars.
refer people? What kind of people drive this? The wealthy -- what do you think?

I think my examples probably are not perfect examples but if you get the gist of what I am trying to find out, please help.
  

Top answer

I agree with you to a certain extent. I'm sure there must be an ESL term for an adjective used as a noun in this way. I know that if you look up "wealthy" in the dictionary you'll find it listed only as an adjective, and not as a noun.

  • I agree with you to a certain extent.
  • I'm sure there must be an ESL term for an adjective used as a noun in this way.
  • I know that if you look up "wealthy" in the dictionary you'll find it listed only as an adjective, and not as a noun.
  • But it can clearly be used as the subject of a sentence.
  • " In the case of "things," consider Henry Kissinger's famous quote, "The illegal we do immediately.
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5 Answers
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I agree with you to a certain extent. I'm sure there must be an ESL term for an adjective used as a noun in this way. I know that if you look up "wealthy" in the dictionary you'll find it listed only as an adjective, and not as a noun. But it can clearly be used as the subject of a sentence. "The wealthy pay no taxes."

In the case of "things," consider Henry Kissinger's famous quote,
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Hi,

I think Mr.M said something like we use adjectives after a definite article in place of a pronoun in a lot of cases. I remember his example went something like this:

In a bar:

What would you have it? Or what would you like to have?
The usual...
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I'd say "it" and "what" may be considered to be pronouns. I have absolutely no problem with the usages you suggest, and I sympathize with your attempts to codify them; but you'll have to be patient if the language community is slow in catching up with your terminology.

Edit. Sorry, I missed your MrM example. "The usual." Can you give me an example of the pronoun this replaces? Poss
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Thank you for your response that had a great number of examples, tinged with the inordinary amount of himility that would like to have warmed the hearts of many who were looking at it.
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I thought your points were very interesting, and I enjoyed thinking about them. - A.

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