Is there a name for adjectives like "beautiful", "incredible", "amazing", etc.?

Is there a name for adjectives like beautiful, incredible, amazing, etc.? Adjectives that are often generically substitutable when, say, describing vacation resorts, or the like. Preferably a name that doesn't sound salesperson-ey, but I'm curious to know those too, so do comment.


Solution 1:

Words like those that have been stripped of semantic content and are used in a vain attempt to add emotion are usually called intensifiers.

intensifier a word, esp an adjective or adverb, that has little semantic content of its own but that serves to intensify the meaning of the word or phrase that it modifies.

See this entry.

Solution 2:

They're Polar predicates. They lie at the pole of a semantic cline, like freezing and boiling:

  • freezing - cold - cool - tepid - warm - hot - boiling

They're not the only ones, of course. The semantic test for them in English is use of absolute(ly), which is limited to use with polar predicates.

  • It's absolutely freezing in here.
  • *It's absolutely cold in here.
  • *It's absolutely cool in here.
  • *It's absolutely tepid in here.
  • *It's absolutely warm in here.
  • *It's absolutely hot in here.
  • It's absolutely boiling in here.

Absolute(ly) also distinguishes the polar 'crazy' sense of mad from its non-polar 'angry' sense.

  • He's mad about the horses. (ambiguous: either 'angry' or 'crazy')
  • He's absolutely mad about the horses. (unambiguous: 'crazy')

Thus, note the grammaticality of

  • absolutely beautiful
  • absolutely incredible
  • absolutely amazing

and of course

  • Absolutely Fabulous.

Solution 3:

When used to the extreme exaggeration, "Hyperbole" comes to mind:

From the Wikipedia Dictionary:

hy·per·bo·le (/hīˈpərbəlē/), Noun

Exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally. Synonyms: exaggeration - hyperbola - overstatement


From the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary:

Latin, from Greek hyperbolē excess, hyperbole, hyperbola, from hyperballein to exceed, from hyper- + ballein to throw First Known Use: 15th century

Solution 4:

The word I use most often is "nondescript". I use it with writers in discussing words that poorly describe their subjects, but it is generally a good description of your cohort of adjectives.

nondescript (adj.):

  • belonging or appearing to belong to no particular class or kind : not easily described
  • lacking distinctive or interesting qualities