
Using an adjective alone is not usually possible, instead of adjective + noun. You cannot say *Hello, my little, or *You poor! However, there are some cases in which it is possible to use an adjective alone.
In informal conversation, we often drop the noun in situations where we are choosing between two or more varieties. If you ask for photos to be developed, the assistant will probably say 'Matt or gloss?', not 'Mat or gloss paper?'
Other examples:
'Pint of milk, please.' - 'I've only got sterilized.'
We've just bought a new car. It's an automatic.
Twenty full-length, please. (a kind of cigarette)
'Three pints of bitter.' - 'Best or ordinary?'
Some adjectives are used so often in this way that they have really turned into nouns. People always say bitter, never *bitter been, in detective stories, we usually read about an automatic, rather than an automatic pistol.
Superlative adjectives are often used with nouns.
Examples:
I'm the oldest in my family.
'Which one shall I get?' - 'The cheapest.'
'Determiner' like this, both, either are often used without a following noun...
Certain adjectives can be used with the definite article to talk about group of people.
Examples:
He's collecting money for the blind.
The unemployed are losing hope.
These expressions have a plural meaning: the dead means 'the dead people' or 'all dead people', but not 'the dead man'. There are not very many expressions of this kind in English. The most common are:
the blind the deaf the sick the mentally ill the handicapped the poor the unemployed the old the dead the rich
Most other adjectives cannot be used in this way. For example, you cannot normally say *the foreign, *the happy or *the disgusting in order to refer groups of people.
Some adjectives of nationality can be used in the same way. They are words ending in -sh or -ch: British, Iris, Welsh, English, Scotch, Spanish, Dutchy, French.
The British are very proud of their sense of humor.
These expressions are plural: the British means 'all (the) British people'. One person from Britain can't be called *a British; one person from Ireland is an Irishman, not *an Irish. Note that people Scotland prefer to be called Scots or Scottish, not Scotch. Nationality words ending in -ese can also be used like this (the Japanese; the Lebanese). However, these words (and Swiss) are really nouns...
In philosophical writing, adjectives are often used with 'the' to refer to general abstract ideas. These expressions are singular...
Examples:
The beautiful is not always the same as the good.
The word 'own' is often used without a following noun (singular or plural).
For example, I don't need your friends. I've got my own.
In talking about trials, the accused is often used instead of the accused person/people.

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