“…Intensification in the noun phrase has traditionally been associated with prenominal slots and patterns involving collocations with degree adverbs (e.g., "very happy/really sweet boy"; see Huddleston & Pullum 2002:531-532). This is, of course, not the only available option: previous literature comments on the central role of adjectives as "the natural locus of intensification" and notes that adjectives constitute the basis of a "varied set of 1 University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK intensifying devices" that range from "standard" phrasal patterns involving adverb and adjectival sub-modifications (e.g., "stunningly beautiful," "very happy," "pure bliss," "terrible bore") to more "peripheral" options involving, among others, affixes and blends (super-special, gigantamous) or intensifying compounds (red-hot, ice-cold drink) (Cacchiani 2017:1; see also Renner 2008;Cacchiani 2010;Benczes 2014;González-Díaz 2017, 2018. As "core" intensifying strategies, degree adverbs in intensificatory phrasal patterns have received ample attention in previous literature, in terms of both their history and their distribution (e.g., Peters 1994;Lorenz 2002;Ito & Tagliamonte 2003;Méndez-Naya 2008).…”