The Comparative Analysis of Adjectives in English and Uzbek Languages


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analysis of adjectives


The Comparative Analysis of Adjectives in English and Uzbek Languages
Otabayev Muzaffar Ne'matullayevich,
English language teacher,
Namangan Institute of Engineering Technology

Abstract: This article examines the application of adjectives and compares their morphological levels in two different languages. Eastern and Western linguists view adjectives in very different ways, and even within a setting, they are often placed side by side to highlight similarities and differences. Although the past is gone, you can still make the present work for you in the near term. Thus, we have attempted to illustrate some of the comparable and dissimilar characteristics of adjectives in both English and Uzbek.
Key words: adjective, morphology, comparison, superlative.
Introduction
There are various ways that languages might vary. It can be utilized for a variety of sounds, voice production techniques, and sentence construction techniques. Language is typically described as a shared set of verbal codes, such as English, Russian, and Uzbek, when it comes to discussions of language and education. However, language can also be characterized as a general, communicative process, particularly when used to describe instruction.
The broad category that can be typologically compared in both the English and Uzbek languages is morphology. There are certain word classes that can be altered during the morphological process that gives rise to English adjectives by either derivational or inflectional affixes to create the grammatical category of adjective.
Comparison is the process or act of comparison. Examples include a) portraying one thing or person as being comparable to or similar to another, and b) comparing two or more things to identify similarities and differences.
One of the major contributions of Uzbek linguistics is the comparative typology of many related and unrelated languages. Some linguists claim that cross-linguistic typology, which deals with the examination, comparison, and classification of languages based on their shared structural elements and forms, is another name for linguistic typology. The worldwide conference that took place in New York in April 1961 is the primary event in this discipline.
Language Universals with Special References to Feature Hierarchies by J. Greenberg was published in 1966. A number of other scholarly works published as articles and special volumes came after these publications.
A noun or pronoun is modified by an adjective by adding a descriptive or specialized information. Adverbs change verbs, other adjectives, and adverbs, but adjectives do not. In most cases, adjectives come before the noun or pronoun they modify. It is not necessary for adjectives and the nouns they describe to share the same gender or number.

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