Category Archives: Prize question

I will give prizes for smart answers to difficult questions sometimes. Don’t worry if you can’t solve the questions. They’re only there because some of you are so good at English that I feel I have to offer you some kind of challenge to keep you at it.

A rebus

Can you figure out what this means? It’s a good wish to you.

rebus

Send your solution to until 4 July 2016. There will be a prize of some kind.

Only HNE students are eligible for the prize, and there will be only one prize. If I receive more than one correct answer, a winner will be drawn by lot.

A prize for an adjective

You are probably aware that in English, adjectives always precede the noun they determine. (It’s the same in German, so this rule won’t cause you much trouble if German is your native language.)

red-appleExample: a red apple.

But wait: almost all participles (the verb forms that are used for perfect and continuous tenses) can be used as adjectives, and these can be placed after a verb. They then indicate a relative clause, part of which was omitted:
the people concerned = the people who are concerned
the damage done = the damage that was done.
the cars waiting = the cars that were/are waiting.

However, this doesn’t work with true adjectives. You can’t say
an apple red (except in poetry, where artistic licence bends the rules of grammar).

However, there is one true English adjective that can be placed directly after a noun. It can also occur before a noun, with a slightly different meaning each time.

Any ideas? Click ‘LEAVE A REPLY’ and tell us. The first person to come up with the correct solution (or any correct solution, for there may be more than one) will win a bottle of delicious homemade apple juice.

I will give you a hint on Friday, unless someone has solved the problem by then.