English Language & Usage Asked on February 16, 2021
I know you can say ” happy as can be,” but can you us any adjective before “as can be”?
Can I say ” I was as American as can be”? or ” He was as excited as can be”?
Many adjectives can precede "as can be". Some are used far more frequently than others, including "happy".
Here's a list of the top 20 adjectives that typically come before the expression:
(Courtesy of CORPUS OF CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN ENGLISH)
Answered by A.P. on February 16, 2021
You can only use the construction with classifying, absolute and extreme adjectives if you're being tongue-in-cheek or whimsical.
*/?'The bridge is as wooden as can be.'
*/?'The weapon is as nuclear as can be.'
*/?'The event is as annual as can be.'
*/?'He was as dead as could be.'
*/?'It is as microscopic as can be.'
But often non-gradable adjectives are treated as gradable with secondary senses:
as American / alive / full as can be.
Answered by Edwin Ashworth on February 16, 2021
Omission of the earlier occurrence of 'as ' in the structure as +adjective +as will lose nothing but give a colour to the language .Let me proceed with the discussion with an example , 'hey guys , your dance is dull as can be , move on further to give it some welly.'
Answered by A.Ramakrishna on February 16, 2021
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