Indefinite Adjectives
Master Indefinite Adjectives in English and learn to describe nonspecific people, things, and quantities with confidence.
Indefinite adjectives come before a noun and give a general meaning instead of a specific one. They refer to nonspecific people, things, or amounts. They help the speaker talk about something without naming an exact person, item, or number.
English uses several indefinite adjectives to show different kinds of nonspecific meaning. Some refer to quantity, some refer to distribution, and some refer to absence. These words are used only when they modify a noun in the noun phrase.
| Word or Phrase | Definition |
|---|---|
| some | It refers to an unspecified number or amount ✨. |
| any | It refers to an unspecified person, thing, or amount, often in general meaning 🌍. |
| no | It shows that not one person, thing, or amount exists 🚫. |
| each | It refers to every member separately 👤. |
| every | It refers to all members of a group as a whole 🧩. |
| all | It refers to the complete number or amount ✅. |
| many | It refers to a large number of countable nouns 🔢. |
| few | It refers to a small number of countable nouns 🤏. |
| several | It refers to more than two but not a large number 📚. |
Some indefinite adjectives are used with countable nouns, some with uncountable nouns, and some with both. Countable nouns have singular and plural forms. Uncountable nouns are usually not counted as separate items.
| Rule |
|---|
| Use many, few, several, each, and every with countable nouns 🔢. |
| Use much and little with uncountable nouns 💧. |
| Use some, any, no, and all with both countable and uncountable nouns ⚖️. |
Indefinite adjectives must match the noun pattern that follows them. Some are used only with singular nouns, some with plural nouns, and some with either singular or plural meaning depending on the noun. This agreement is part of correct noun phrase structure.
| Rule |
|---|
| Each and every are followed by singular countable nouns 👤. |
| Many, few, and several are followed by plural countable nouns 👥. |
| Much and little are followed by uncountable nouns 🌊. |
| Some, any, no, and all take the form that matches the noun after them 🧩. |
Indefinite adjectives usually appear before the noun they modify. They can come before other describing adjectives in the noun phrase. They form part of the determiner area at the beginning of the noun phrase.
| Rule |
|---|
| An indefinite adjective usually comes before the noun 📝. |
| An indefinite adjective usually comes before descriptive adjectives in the noun phrase 📍. |
| The indefinite adjective stays close to the noun phrase it modifies 🔗. |
An indefinite adjective modifies a noun, but an indefinite pronoun replaces a noun. The same word can sometimes do both jobs. The function depends on whether a noun follows the word.
| Rule |
|---|
| A word is an indefinite adjective when it comes before a noun 📘. |
| A word is an indefinite pronoun when it stands alone without a noun 🧍. |
| Words such as some, any, all, and no can be either adjectives or pronouns depending on structure 🔄. |
Indefinite adjectives do not ask questions. Interrogative adjectives such as what, which, and whose introduce a question and modify a noun. The difference is in meaning and purpose, not only in position.
| Word or Phrase | Definition |
|---|---|
| indefinite adjective | It modifies a noun with a nonspecific meaning 🔍. |
| interrogative adjective | It modifies a noun in a question ❓. |
| difference | It is based on whether the speaker gives general reference or asks for information ⚖️. |
You can now identify indefinite adjectives and use them to talk about nonspecific people, things, and quantities. You can choose common forms such as some, any, no, each, every, all, many, few, and several. You can also distinguish them from indefinite pronouns and interrogative adjectives, and you can place them correctly in a noun phrase.