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Lesson 7. The Complete Guide of Adjectives in English

Adjectives in English
Adjectives in English

What is an adjective?

Adjectives, which is one of the parts of speech, are words that used to describe nouns or pronouns. Adjectives give information about opinion, size, shape, age, color, origin, material, or temperature of an object.

Information Examples
opinion beautiful, smart, lovely
size short, long, small
shape round, square, rectangular
age young, old, antique
color red, blue, gold
origin English, Asian, American
material wooden, plastic, glass
temperature hot, cold, warm

 

Where do we put adjectives in a sentence?

In general, we put the adjective before the noun they modify.

Structure: Adjective + Noun

Examples:

A great opinion.

The brown chair.

That Chinese girl.

 

The adjective appears after the noun if there is the following verb in the sentence:

to be, appear, become, feel, get, go, keep, seem, smell, sound, turn, taste

Structure: Noun + Verb + Adjective

Examples:

The opinion sounds great.

The chair is brown.

That girl is Chinese.

 

What do we do if there are more than one adjectives in a sentence?

The correct order of adjectives in a sentence is:

Opinion – Size – Temperature – Age – Shape – Color – Origin – Material

Examples:

The small young girl is my cousin.

[size – age]

 

That beautiful antique France paint is painted by Leonardo da Vinci.

[opinion – age – origin]

 

The big round brown wooden table is new.

[size – shape – color – material]

 

 

Note: Adjectives are separated by ‘commas(,)‘, ‘and‘ and ‘but‘ if adjectives modify a noun in the same way. These are called coordinate adjectives.

Examples:

The beautifullovely girl is my cousin.

[opinion – opinion]

 

The expensivebeautiful and comfortable sofa is new.

[opinion – opinion – opinion]

 

The expensivebeautiful but uncomfortable dress is not mine.

[opinion – opinion – opinion]

 

How is the form of the adjective? Are they regular or irregular?

There are adjective degrees that come in irregular form. We use adjective degrees to describe the different degrees of comparison: positive adjectives, comparative adjectives, and superlative adjectives.

Positive adjectives: tall, young, beautiful.

Comparative adjectives: taller, younger, more beautiful.

Superlative adjectives: the tallest, the youngest, the most beautiful.

 

Examples:

Mary is young.

Mary is younger than James.

Mary is the youngest in the family.

 

How to emphasize the meaning of an adjective?

We use the adverbs ‘very’ or ‘really’ before the adjective to emphasize an adjective.

 

Examples:

James is very tall.

Chinese is a really important language.

 

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