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Adjectives – Part 1

1. What are adjectives?

Adjectives are words that describe nouns (objects, people).

For example:

nice, good, beautiful, worried, insulting, continuous

Adjectives can go before nouns:

adjective + noun

a nice person

a good day

a beautiful cat

an insulting remark

Adjectives can go after some verbs:

verbs + adjective

seem nice

is good

looks beautiful

feel happy

2. Order of adjectives

Sometimes we need to use more than one adjectives. An opinion normally goes before the fact:

Opinion + fact + noun
An interesting

A beautiful

An interesting

Spanish

black

new

movie

cat

idea

If we have several factual adjectives, we use the following order:

size +age +shape +colour +origin +material +purpose +noun
a huge ancient round blue Japanese wooden —- table
a small new —— —– German silver tea spoon
an —- old square black —— plastic radio button

3. Adding suffixes

Adjectives can be individual, unique words (nice, small) or can be formed from other words by using suffixes or prefixes.

– able: manageable, readable

– ible: flexible, edible

– ant: hesitant, distant

– ing: sleeping

– ic: energetic, apologetic

– ish: foolish, blueish

– ous: dangerous, famous

– ly: friendly, weekly

– al: political, musical

– ful: harmful, tactful

– les: harmless, careless

– ive: attractive, passive

4. Adding prefixes

We can form new adjectives by adding prefixes to words. These prefixes create a negative meaning.

im-: impossible, impatient

il-: illogical, illegal

un-: undesirable, unattractive

in-: indispensable, indirect

dis-: dishonest, disabled

ir-: irreplaceable, irrational

pre-: pre-negotiated, preheated

Note: adding pre- to an adjective, does not create a negative meaning.

5. Compound adjectives

Compound adjectives are created by using two words. They are usually written with a hyphen.

bullet-proof, duty- free, long-distance, sugar-free, hand-made

The second part is often a present or past participle. These are often used to describe a person:

long-legged, curly-haired, self-centred, absent-minded, ill-fitting, expensive-looking

We can also use prepositions to create a compound adjective:

off-putting, built-up, cut-off, run-down, thrown-out

6. Adjectives of measurement

We can combine numbers with nouns to make compound adjectives. They are used to measure different things, ie. age, distance, etc.

a five-minute song (time)

a two-year-old girl (age)

a ten-euro ticket (price)

a one-litre bottle (volume)

a three-kilo parcel (weight)

a fifty-square metre house (area)

an hour-long meeting (duration)

Ready to test your knowledge?

Put the grammar rules above into practice with the challenge below.

Adjectives Challenge
⏱ 00:00
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SCORE: 0
🏷️
Adjectives Challenge
Practice using adjective order, prefixes, suffixes, compound adjectives, and measurements in a professional workplace context.
💼 Workplace Context 🏷️ Adjective Rules 2 Levels · 14 Questions ❤️❤️❤️ 3 Lives
Type the correct adjective from the bank into the blank spaces.
Level 1 — Fill in the blank
WORD BANK
    Drag the correct phrases into the empty spaces (Pay attention to Adjective Order!).
    Level 2 — Drag & Drop
      WORD BANK
      🏆
      Challenge Complete!
      Well done on finishing both levels.
      0
      points out of 14
      Your Answers
      Copied to clipboard! 📋

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      • Questions
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      • Spelling and Punctuation
      • Tenses
        • Future Tenses
        • Past Tenses
        • Present Tenses
      • Verbs
        • Gerund or Infinitive
        • Irregular Verbs
        • Modal Verbs
        • Verb Patterns
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