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Pedants' corner

Grammar help please!

6 replies

NorkyButNice · 15/07/2008 15:09

In the sentence "It is hotter today" - what is the word "hotter" (ie verb, noun, adjective, adverb etc)?

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margoandjerry · 15/07/2008 15:11

adjective

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taipo · 15/07/2008 15:12

It's an adjective, in the comparative form.

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AMumInScotland · 15/07/2008 15:12

I think it's an adjective. A comparative one. Because you're sort of saying "It's a hotter day today"

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NorkyButNice · 15/07/2008 16:01

I thought so - am having an argument with a guy at work who reckons it's an adverb as it's describing the verb "is"?

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AMumInScotland · 15/07/2008 16:12

No, it's describing the "It" - the day.

To be an adverb it would be "hotly" - you might say something hotly, then it would be an adverb because it's descibing the way you are saying it.

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witchandchips · 15/07/2008 16:21

It is actually a predicative adjective (a type of complement). It defines or modifies the subject (in this case It)

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