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Adjectives are describing words. They modify nouns or pronouns and give us
more information about a person, place or thing.
Adjectives not only make your writing more interesting, but they also help you to
be specific.
Example:
—I like that house.
—Which one?
—The small green house with the colourful door.
Placement of adjectives
We place adjectives:
before nouns;
Examples:
I live in a small village.
The town hall is a historical building.
The local market sells fresh produce.
after linking verbs (appear, be, look, seem, smell, taste …). Linking verbs
connect a noun with an adjective.
Examples:
The neighbours seem friendly.
The village is famous for its apple juice.
The juice tastes great.
Order of adjectives
In general, we place a maximum of 2-3 adjectives before a noun.
Example:
A nice wooden chair.
There are two general rules that help us to decide on the order of these
adjectives:
Rule 1: opinion adjectives (nice, good, bad, pretty …) come before fact
adjectives (new, old, big, round, metal, red …)
Example:
A nice wooden chair.
nice = my opinion; wooden = factual information
Rule 2: general adjectives (old, hot, small …) come before more specific
or identifying adjectives (wooden, Italian, striped …)
Example:
An expensive local cheese.
there are many expensive cheeses, but only a few that are local to my
area
If the adjectives come after a linking verb, we connect the final two with and.
Example:
This cheese is delicious, fresh and local.
If two adjectives of the same type come before the noun, they are also
connected with and.
Examples:
A pretty woollen blanket.
one opinion adjective (pretty); one fact adjective (woollen)
but: A pink and yellow blanket.
two colour adjectives
Example:
A black and white photo.
not: A white and black photo.
Although we rarely need it, the complete rule for the order of English adjectives
is as follows:
Non-gradable adjectives
We can classify adjectives into gradable and non-gradable.
Most adjectives are gradable. This means that they can be modified
with adverbs like quite, a bit, really …
Example:
Dan is quite tall.
This hotel is a bit expensive.
Example:
tall – taller – the tallest
expensive – more expensive – the most expensive
Absolute adjectives express an absolute value (dead, pregnant,
finished …). They do not have comparative forms and we cannot modify
them with adverbs.
Examples:
My homework is finished.
not: My homework is a bit finished.
Shakespeare died long before Mozart.
not: Shakespeare is more dead than Mozart.
Strong adjectives, also known as extreme adjectives (hilarious = very
funny, boiling = very hot …), already express the highest degree of
something, meaning that they are almost never used in their comparative
forms. We can only use the extreme adverb absolutely to modify strong
adjectives.
Examples:
The water was absolutely freezing!
not: The water was very freezing!
Strong adjectives can improve your writing style. They help you avoid overusing
adverbs like very. Compare the sentences below:
Example:
The weather was very hot so the pool was very busy. The water
was very cold but felt very good on such a hot day.
→ The weather was boiling so the pool was packed. The water
was freezing but felt amazing on such a hot day.
The table below shows some of the most common strong adjectives in English: