Adjectivisation: Difference between revisions

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{{a|plainenglish|{{Subtable|''This'' sentence is indicative of [[adjectivisation]]. <br>''This'' one indicates elegant prose. }}}}The lexo-crime of taking a perfectly good [[verb]], having it identify as an [[adjective]] and then demeaning it by sticking an inferior, ''dull'', verb — like be, make, do, give, or worst of all ''[[effect]]'' — in front of it. Dead giveaways constructions include the [[passive]] and the word “[[of]]”.  
{{a|plainenglish|{{Subtable|''This'' sentence is indicative of [[adjectivisation]]. <br>''This'' one indicates elegant prose. }}}}The lexo-crime of taking a perfectly good [[verb]], having it identify as an [[adjective]] and then demeaning it by sticking an inferior, ''dull'', verb — like be, make, do, give, or worst of all ''[[effect]]'' — in front of it. Dead giveaways constructions include the [[passive]] and the word “[[of]]”.  
{{quote|“I would be [[inclined]] [[to be]] [[supportive]] [[of]] the proposal at this point in time.”}}


{{sa}}
{{sa}}
*[[nominalisation]]
*[[nominalisation]]

Revision as of 18:14, 3 February 2022

Towards more picturesque speech

This sentence is indicative of adjectivisation.
This one indicates elegant prose.

SEC guidance on plain EnglishIndex: Click to expand:
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The lexo-crime of taking a perfectly good verb, having it identify as an adjective and then demeaning it by sticking an inferior, dull, verb — like be, make, do, give, or worst of all effect — in front of it. Dead giveaways constructions include the passive and the word “of”.

“I would be inclined to be supportive of the proposal at this point in time.”

See also