Modifiers
What is a modifier?
The words or phrases that modify the noun/pronoun are known as modifiers. In other words,
some words or phrases take their position before and after the noun head in a noun phrase and
modify the noun adding special meaning to it. Modifiers placed before the noun head are called
premodifiers while modifiers after the noun head are postmodifiers. Therefore, a noun phrase is
usually formed as follows.
( Determiner + Premodifier + Noun head + Postmodifier)
Example: I saw the beautiful girl singing
The Beautiful Girl singing
Determiner Premodifier Noun head Postmodifier
Types of modifiers
Look at the passage below. Notice the words in italics:
Elvis Presley came from a poor family. He was born on 8 January in Mississippi. When Elvis
was 13, he asked his mother to buy him a bicycle which was too expensive. His mother, a poor
housewife, could only buy an ordinary guitar. In the same year Elvis and his family left
Mississippi. They moved to Memphis, a small town in Tennessee. One day in 1954 he went to a
recording studio called Sun Records. He wanted to make a record for his mother’s birthday. The
secretary at the studio heard Elvis and took him to her boss, Sam Phillips. Elvis was Sam
Phillips’ dream – a white boy with a black voice.
If you notice carefully, you will see the words in italics tell us something about the nouns they
modify. For example, the adjective ‘poor’ modifies the noun ‘family’. Now let us see how some
other modifiers have been used in the text:
which was too expensive
poor
a small town in Tennessee
recording
called sun Records
for his mother’s birthday
Sam Phillips
white
black
modifies
modifies
modifies
modifies
modifies
modifies
modifies
modifies
modifies
bi-cycle
housewife
memphis
studio
studio
record
her boss
boy
voice
Premodifiers Postmodifiers Dangling modifiers
From the examples, we see that adjectives are often used as modifiers. But there are other
examples of modifiers which are not adjectives. Therefore a noun can also be modified by a
phrase, a clause or another noun. We have also seen that modifiers can be used both before and
after nouns they modify.
Exercise 1
Work in pairs to find out modifiers in the following passage. Write them in the table below
to show which of them are premodifers and which of them are postmodifiers.
Premodifiers Postmodifiers
Charles Dickens, of all the great nineteenth Century English novelists, is perhaps the most
beloved by his readers. The ideas for many of the events and people in Dickens’s novels grew
from his own experiences. Dickens was born in Portsmouth, on the southern coast of England,
and grew up in a poor neighbourhood in London. His father, a clerk, accumulated huge debts.
Dickens endured a difficult childhood, for he was forced to work in factories from an early age.
His employers were often needlessly cruel. The painful experiences Dickens endured as a child
worker inspired him to write Oliver Twist and David Copperfield. In these two well-known
novels appear some of the cruelest characters in English fiction. Vivid portraits of schoolmasters,
criminals and innocent victims are found in many of his novels. Dickens, who died as a result of
continuing poor health at the age of fifty-eight, left an enduring legacy.
Lesson 2: Premodifiers
What is a Premodifier?
Modifiers which are placed after determiners but before the head of a noun phrase are called
premodifiers. Adjectives are widely used as premodifiers, yet there are some other types of
premodifers too.
Different types of premodifiers:
1. Adjectives as premodifiers:
We had a pleasant holiday last week.
There were plenty of bright people before the castle.
Sabrina is a meritorious student.
2. Nouns as premodifiers:
Are the removal expenses paid by your company?
The passenger ship dropped anchor in the harbor.
3. Adverbs as premodifiers:
We had a very pleasant holiday last week.
She writes a few letters to her parents.
4. –ing participles as premodifiers:
Only a beginning student will find difficulty with Calculus.
The developing countries are doing well in garments business.
5. –ed participles as premodifiers:
Often the reduced price of everyday commodities are out of reach for the poor.
The defeated army were captivated in the prison.
His father is a retired English teacher.
6. Compound words as premodifiers:
We have just bought a brand-new car.
That’s an absolutely first-class idea.
That is an out-of-date dictionary.
The room is decorated with red-and-white-striped wallpaper.
Lesson 3: Postmodifiers
What is a Postmodifier?
A noun can be modified by a following word, phrase or clause, and the word, phrase, or clause is
called postmodifier. Postmodifiers are of different types:
1. Adjectives as postmodifiers:
There is nothing new about these techniques.
They found her mother sick.
2. Adverbs as postmodifiers:
Can someone tell me a way out of it?
The authority here are very strict.
Can you find the road back?
We visited the house where Shakespeare lived.
3. Prepositional phrases as postmodifiers:
A white woman in jeans was watching me.
A ferryman with colourful toys was waiting in the station.
There must be a better way of doing it.
The little boy is tired of hard work.
4. Relative clauses as postmodifiers:
I saw the boy who was going to the market.
They cleaned the room which was filled with dirt.
5. –ing participles clauses as postmodifiers:
A man wearing a grey suit left the office.
The people working in the IT business are often young.
Do you know any of those people sitting behind us?
6. –ed participle clauses as postmodifiers:
The question debated in the parliament yesterday was about the new tax.
The subject discussed in the book is difficult to understand.
7. –to infinitive clauses as postmodifiers:
I have got something to say to you.
I have nothing to share with him.
8. Appositive clauses as postmodifiers:
We were delighted at the news that our team had own.
Everybody will agree the fact that inflation is causing hardship.
Lesson 4: Dangling Modifiers
What is a dangling modifier?
A dangling modifier is a word or phrase that modifies a word not clearly stated in the sentence.
In other words, dangling modifiers are used either as a single word or a group of words in a
sentence where they usually indicate the completion of some work but the performer of the work
is not modified directly by it. These modifiers usually appear at the very beginning of a sentence,
but these may appear at the end of a sentence as well.
Consider the following example:
Having finished the study, Ragib turned on TV.
In the example above, “having finished” states an action but does not name the doer of that
action. In English sentences, the doer must be the subject of the main clause that follows. In this
sentence, it is Ragib. He seems logically to be the one doing the action (“having finished”), and
this sentence therefore does not have a dangling modifier.
Now consider this sentence:
Having finished the assignment, the TV was turned on.
“Having finished” is a participle expressing action, but the doer is not the TV set (the subject of
the main clause): TV sets don’t finish assignments. Since the doer of the action expressed in the
participle has not been clearly stated, the participle phrase is said to be a dangling modifier.
Some more examples of dangling modifiers and revisions:
Dangling Modifier:
After reading the original study, the article remains unconvincing.
(The article – the subject of the main clause – did not read the original study.)
Possible Revision:
After reading the original study, I find the article unconvincing.
Dangling Modifier:
Relieved of your responsibilities at your job, your home should be a place of relax.
(Your home – the subject of the main clause – is not relieved of your responsibilities.)
Possible Revision:
Relieved of your responsibilities at your job, you should be able to relax at home.
Dangling Modifier:
The experiment was a failure, not having studied the lab manual carefully.
(The experiment – the subject of the main clause – is not supposed to study the lab manual.)
Possible Revision:
They failed the experiment, not having studied the lab manual carefully.
Dangling Modifiers Possible Revisions
Having arrived late for practice, a written
excuse was needed.
Having arrived late for practice, the captain
of the team needed a written excuse.
Without knowing his name, it was difficult
to introduce him.
Because Sujana did not know his name, it
was difficult to introduce him.
To improve his results, the experiment was
done again.
He improved his results by doing the
experiment again.
Answer key:
Lesson-1 :
Exercise-1:
Premodifiers Postmodifiers
Southern
Poor
huge
difficult
painful
child
two well-known
cruelest
vivid
innocent
poor
Of all the great nineteenth century English
novelists
On the southern coast of England
A clerk
who died as a result of continuing poor health
at the age of fifty-eight