It is better to be beautiful than to be good. But…. it is better to be good that to be ugly. Oscar Wilde Adjectives - Adjectives describe noun and are used in front of nouns. They have the same form for singular and plural. They do not change for male and female.
- We use adjectives to say how something is, seems, becomes, looks, feels, sounds, tastes or smells.
- Nilufar is kind
- Saida felt angry
- Zumrad seems shy
- It’s getting cold
- That smells wonderful!!!
- Barno looks sad
- Order of adjectives
- 1.Opinion: lovely, difficult, heavy
- 2. Size: large, long, short
- 3. Age: old, second –hand, brand-new
- 4. Shape: round, square, triangle
- 5. Temperature: hot, cold, warm
- 6. Colour: green, blue, purple
- 7. Material: wooden, plastic, silk
- 8. Purpose (what is for?): swimming pool
- 9. Final noun: swimming pool
Examples: - An old leather football boot.
- (age, material, purpose, noun)
- A lovely green silk shirt.
- (opinion, colour, material, noun)
Adjectives ending –ing describe something that we are reacting to (outside us). Adjectives ending –ed desribe our feelings and reactions (inside us). - My work was tiring. It made me tired.
- This film is interesting. I’m interested in the film.
Adjectives - Morphological characteristics
- Syntactical characteristics.
Morphological characteristics - Making comparisons
- A) Positives
- B) Comparatives
- C) Superlatives
¤Comparatives compare two separate things. Aziza is a better player than Dildora. One syllable: - er big-bigger, dry-drier, brave-braver Two or more syllables: more more modern, more interesting ¤Superlatives compare one thing - ¤Superlatives compare one thing
- Feruza is the best player in the team.
- One syllable: -est
- long-the longest, big – the biggest
- Two or more syllables: most
- modern-the most modern,
- interesting-the most interesting
Note - The (definite article) is used with superlatives.
- The + Superlatives
Irregular forms - Good better the best
- Bad worse the worst
- Far farther/further the farthest
- the furthest
- little less the least
- Much/many more the most
Syntactical characteristics - An attribute
- A predicative
- A little fat chap thrust out his under lip and the tall
- fellow frowned. (Mansfield) Attribute
- Laura was terribly nervous. (Mansfield) Predicative
Morphological composition of the adjectives - Simple good, red, black
- Derivative beautiful, foolish, unimportant
- Compound short-sleeved, badly-behaved
Classification of adjectives - Qualitative
- soft, necessary, high, warm, important
- Relative
- wooden, Italian, monthly, plastic
- You are incredibly, inordinately, devastatingly, immortally, calamitously, adorably beautiful.
- Rupert Brooke
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