Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Adjectives

Adjectives describe or give information about nouns or pronouns. 

For example:-

The grey dog barked. (The adjective grey describes the noun "dog".)

The good news is that the form of an adjective does not change. It does not matter if the noun being modified is male or female, singular or plural, subject or object.

Some adjectives give us factual information about the noun - age, size colour etc (fact adjectives - can't be argued with). Some adjectives show what somebody thinks about something or somebody - nice, horrid, beautiful etc (opinion adjectives - not everyone may agree).

If you are asked questions with which, whose, what kind, or how many, you need an adjective to be able to answer. 

There are different types of adjectives in the English language:
Numeric: six, one hundred and one 
Quantitative: more, all, some, half, more than enough
Qualitative: colour, size, smell etc.
Possessive: my, his, their, your
Interrogative: which, whose, what
Demonstrative: this, that, those, these

!Note - The articles a, an, and the and the possessives my, our, your, and their are also adjectives.


Opinion

Adjectives can be used to give your opinion about something.

good, pretty, right, wrong, funny, light, happy, sad, full, soft, hard etc. 

For example:

He was a silly boy.


Size

Adjectives can be used to describe size. 

big, small, little, long, tall, short, same as, etc. 

For example: 
"The big man." or "The big woman". 


Age

Adjectives can be used to describe age. 

For example:
"He was an old man." or "She was an old woman." 


Shape

Adjectives can be used to describe shape.

round, circular, triangular, rectangular, square, oval, etc. 

For example:
"It was a square box." or "They were square boxes." 


Colour

Adjectives can be used to describe colour.

blue, red, green, brown, yellow, black, white, etc. 

For example:
"The blue bag." or "The blue bags".

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