adjectivescher
Adjectivescher is a term used in linguistic discussions, particularly in typology and constructed-language grammars, to describe a nominal form derived from an adjective by a productive derivational suffix, commonly labeled -scher. The adjectivescher functions as a noun and denotes either the abstract property named by the base adjective or a class of entities that possess that property. The concept is not widely standardized in mainstream descriptive linguistics and appears mainly in theoretical discussions and conlang documentation.
Origin and morphology: The core idea is that adjectives can be converted into nouns through the suffix
Usage and syntax: In languages that employ adjectivescher, the word can occur as a subject, object, or
Examples: In a hypothetical language Aurelan, bluescher means “the color blue” and greenscher means “the quality
See also: Nominalization, denominal noun, deadjectival noun, derivational morphology.