B2 – Upper Intermediate
Non-Gradable Adjectives
Non-gradable adjectives describe absolute or extreme qualities — things that are not usually thought of in degrees.
They typically mean:
- “100%” of a quality, or
- an extreme point on a scale
Examples:
- perfect (cannot be “more perfect”)
- dead (cannot be “very dead”)
- freezing (already extremely cold)
- impossible (no degrees logically)
Types
A. Absolute Adjectives (binary: yes/no)
These describe states that are either true or not:
- dead, alive, married, finished, empty, full, unique
o: The glass is completely empty.
x: The glass is very empty.
B. Extreme Adjectives (strong intensity)
These already contain the idea of “very”:
- freezing (= very cold)
- exhausted (= very tired)
- terrified (= very afraid)
- delicious (= very tasty)
o: The water is absolutely freezing.
x: The water is very freezing.
Adverbs Used with Non-Gradable Adjectives
Instead of very, we use intensifiers like:
Common Intensifiers:
- absolutely
- completely
- totally
- utterly
- entirely
Examples:
The result was absolutely perfect.
She was completely exhausted.
The situation is utterly impossible.
Gradable vs Non-Gradable Comparison
| Gradable | Non-Gradable Equivalent |
|---|---|
| very cold | freezing |
| very tired | exhausted |
| very big | enormous |
| very good | excellent |
Note: Advanced point: English often prefers lexical intensification (stronger word) rather than adding very.
Can Non-Gradable Adjectives Ever Be Gradable?
Yes — in informal or expressive language, speakers sometimes bend the rules:
Examples:
This is more perfect than the last version.
I feel very dead after that workout.
This is stylistic, emotional, and sometimes ironic or humorous. But in formal/academic English, avoid this.
Subtle Meaning Differences
Compare:
- very cold → moderately high degree
- freezing → extreme, vivid, often emotional
- very good → positive but neutral
- excellent → strong approval
Note: Choosing non-gradable adjectives adds precision and impact.
Collocation Patterns
Certain intensifiers strongly prefer non-gradable adjectives:
- absolutely + perfect, impossible, essential
- utterly + ridiculous, absurd, useless
- completely + wrong, different, empty
Examples:
That idea is utterly absurd.
She was completely right.
Common Advanced Errors
x: very perfect
o: absolutely perfect
x: a bit impossible
o: completely impossible
x: extremely unique (controversial in formal English)
o: truly unique (better stylistically)