Adjectives
Adjectives
describe or modify nouns.
Adjectives
generally appear immediately before the noun.
- A
pretty girl
- Red
flowers
- A long
stick
- Heavy
boxes
- Warm
weather
Commonly,
adjectives of opposite meaning are formed by adding a prefix such as un, in, or
dis.
- clear –
unclear, important – unimportant, predictable – unpredictable, believable
– unbelievable, common – uncommon, aware – unaware, ambiguous –
unambiguous, conventional – unconventional, certain – uncertain
- definite
– indefinite, correct – incorrect, comparable – incomparable, complete –
incomplete, evitable – inevitable, expensive – inexpensive
- able –
disable, assemble – disassemble, content – discontent, similar –
dissimilar
When
using a string of adjectives, they should appear in a set order: size/shape +
age + color + origin + material.
- A big
brown house
- A small
old English desk
- A
beautiful black Italian leather purse
- Delicious
Chinese food
The
+ adjective describes a class or group of people and acts as a noun.
- the
old, the young, the poor, the rich, the oppressed, the homeless, etc.
- This
popular TV show is loved by the old.
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