Adjectives
An adjective is a word that
tells us more about a noun. (By "noun" we include pronouns and noun
phrases.)
An adjective "qualifies"
or "modifies" a noun (a big dog).
Adjectives can be used before a noun
(I like Chinese food) or after certain verbs (It is hard).
We can often use two or more
adjectives together (a beautiful young French lady).
It is sometimes said that the
adjective is the enemy of the noun. This is because, very often, if we use the
precise noun we don't need an adjective. For example, instead of saying "a
large, impressive house" (2 adjectives + 1 noun) we could simply say
"a mansion" (1 noun).
Determiners
the, a/an, this, some, any
the, a/an, this, some, any
Comparative Adjectives
richer, more exciting
richer, more exciting
Superlative Adjectives
the richest, the most exciting
the richest, the most exciting
see also:
Noun as Adjective
coffee cup, bus station, research centre
coffee cup, bus station, research centre
Determiners
Determiners are words like the,
an, my, some. They are grammatically similar. They all
come at the beginning of noun phrases, and usually we cannot use more than one
determiner in the same noun phrase.
Articles:
Possessive Adjectives:
Other determiners:
- each, every
- either, neither
- some, any, no
- much, many; more, most
- little, less, least
- few, fewer, fewest
- what, whatever; which, whichever
- both, half, all
- several
- enough
Some grammarians do not consider
determiners as adjectives, but give them a class of their own
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1997-2014 EnglishClub
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Adjective Before Noun
We often use more than one adjective before the noun:- I like big black dogs.
- She was wearing a beautiful long red dress.
1. First of all, the general order is:
opinion, fact
"Opinion" is what you think about something. "Fact" is what is definitely true about something.
- a lovely new dress (not
a new lovely dress) - a boring French film (not
a French boring film)
other / size, shape, age, colour / origin / material / purpose
- a small 18th-century French coffee table
- a rectangular black wooden box
- articles (a, the)
- possessives (my, your...)
- demonstratives (this, that...)
- quantifiers (some, any, few, many...)
- numbers (one, two, three)
- Many newspapers are black and white.
- She was wearing a long, blue and yellow dress.
adjectives
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head noun
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determiner
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opinion adjectives
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fact adjectives
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other
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size, shape, age, colour
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origin
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material
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purpose*
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two
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ugly
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black
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guard
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dogs
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a
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well-known
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Chinese
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artist
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a
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small, 18th-century
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French
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coffee
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table
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your
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fabulous
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new
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sports
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car
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a
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lovely
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pink and green
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Thai
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silk
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dress
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some
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black
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Spanish
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leather
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riding
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boots
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a
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big black
and white
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dog
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this
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cheap
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plastic
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rain
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coat
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an
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old
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wooden
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fishing
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boat
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my
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new
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tennis
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racket
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a
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wonderful
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15th-century
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Arabic
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poem
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*often a noun used as an adjective
Not all grammarians agree about the exact order of
adjectives, and the detailed rules are complicated. The rules on this page are
for the normal, "natural" order of adjectives. These rules are not
rigid, and you may sometimes wish to change the order for emphasis. Consider
the following conversations:
Conversation 1
A "I want to buy a round table."
B "Do you want a new round table or an old round table?"
Conversation 2
A "I want to buy an old table".
B "Do you want a round old table or a square old table?"
Adjective
After Verb »Conversation 1
A "I want to buy a round table."
B "Do you want a new round table or an old round table?"
Conversation 2
A "I want to buy an old table".
B "Do you want a round old table or a square old table?"
Adjective After Verb
An adjective can come after some verbs, such as: be, become, feel, get, look, seem, smell, soundEven when an adjective comes after the verb and not before a noun, it always refers to and qualifies the subject of the sentence, not the verb.
Look at the examples below: subject verb adjective
- Ram is English.
- Because she had to wait, she became impatient.
- Is it getting dark?
- The examination did not seem difficult.
- Your friend looks nice.
- This towel feels damp.
- That new film doesn't sound very interesting.
- Dinner smells good tonight.
- This milk tastes sour.
- It smells bad.
Note also that in the above structure (subject verb adjective), the adjective can qualify a pronoun since the subject may be a pronoun.
Now check your understanding »
Comparative AdjectivesWhen we talk about two things, we can "compare" them. We can see if they are the same or different. Perhaps they are the same in some ways and different in other ways. We can use comparative adjectives to describe the differences.
We can use comparative adjectives when talking about two things (not three or more
things).
In the example below, "bigger" is the comparative form of the
adjective "big":
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Formation of Comparative AdjectivesThere are two ways to make or form a comparative adjective:
With some
2-syllable adjectives, we can use '-er' or 'more':
The following adjectives have irregular forms:
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Use of Comparative Adjectives
We use comparative adjectives when talking about 2 things (not 3 or 10 or 1,000,000 things, only 2 things).Often, the comparative adjective is followed by "than".
Look at these examples:
- John is 1m80. He is tall. But Chris is 1m85. He is taller than John.
- America is big. But Russia is bigger.
- I want to have a more powerful computer.
- Is French more difficult than English?
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Earth
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Mars
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Diameter (km)
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12,760
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6,790
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Mars is smaller
than Earth.
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Distance from Sun (million km)
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150
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228
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Mars is more distant
from the Sun.
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Length of day (hours)
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24
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25
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A day on Mars is slightly longer
than a day on Earth.
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Moons
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1
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2
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Mars has more moons
than Earth.
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Surface temperature (degrees Celcius)
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22
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-23
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Mars is colder than
Earth.
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Although we use comparative adjectives when talking about two things (not three or more
things), in fact one or both of the things may be a group of things.
- Mt Everest is higher than all other mountains.
Here, we are
talking about hundreds of mountains, but we are still comparing one thing (Mt
Everest) to one other thing (all other mountains).
[See
also Superlative Adjectives]
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Formation of Superlative AdjectivesAs with comparative adjectives, there are two ways to form a superlative adjective:
With some 2-syllable adjectives, we can use '-est' or
'most':
The following adjectives have irregular forms:
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Use of Superlative AdjectivesWe use a superlative adjective to describe one thing in a group of three or more things. Look at these examples:
When we compare one thing with itself, we do not use
"the":
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"Gradable adjectives" are also called
"qualitative adjectives". "Grading adverbs" are also called
"submodifiers".
A gradable adjective can also have comparative and superlative forms:
The
adjective dead is non-gradable because it
is an absolute. Dead is dead. We
cannot be more or less dead. One person cannot be "deader" than
another. Other absolutes include: correct,
unique, perfect
Non-gradable AdjectivesA non-gradable adjective cannot be used with grading adverbs:
Don't
try to learn lists of gradable and non-gradable adjectives! It's better to
understand what makes an adjective gradable or non-gradable. This is a
matter of logic and common sense. Most native-speakers have never heard of
gradable and non-gradable adjectives. They just "feel" that it
doesn't make sense
to say "
However, a non-gradable adjective can be used with
"non-grading adverbs" (which usually just give the adjective
extra impact), for example:
Adjectives that can be gradable and non-gradableSome adjectives may have more than one meaning or sense. It's possible for the same adjective to be gradable with one sense and non-gradable with another sense. For example:
Adverbs used with gradable and non-gradable adjectivesThe adverbs really (very much) and fairly and pretty (both meaning "to a significant degree, but less than very") can often be used with gradable and non-gradable adjectives:
"Quite" with gradable and non-gradable adjectivesThe meaning of the adverb "quite" changes according to the type of adjective we use it with:
Reference
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Noun as Adjective
As you know, a noun is a person, place or thing, and an adjective is a word that describes a noun:
adjective
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noun
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clever
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teacher
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small
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office
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black
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horse
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noun
as adjective |
noun
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history
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teacher
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ticket
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office
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race
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horse
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The "noun as adjective" always comes first
If you remember this it will help you to understand what is being talked about:- a race horse is a horse that runs in races
- a horse race is a race for horses
- a boat race is a race for boats
- a love story is a story about love
- a war story is a story about war
- a tennis ball is a ball for playing tennis
- tennis shoes are shoes for playing tennis
- a computer exhibition is an exhibition of computers
- a bicycle shop is a shop that sells bicycles
The "noun as adjective" is singular
Just like a real adjective, the "noun as adjective" is invariable. It is usually in the singular form.
Right
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Wrong
|
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boat race
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boat races
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NOT boats race, boats races
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toothbrush
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toothbrushes
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NOT teethbrush, teethbrushes
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shoe-lace
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shoe-laces
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NOT shoes-lace, shoes-laces
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cigarette packet
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cigarette packets
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NOT cigarettes packet, cigarettes packets
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A few nouns look plural but we usually treat them as singular (for example news, billiards, athletics). When we use these nouns "as adjectives" they are unchanged:
- a news reporter, three news reporters
- one billiards table, four billiards tables
- an athletics trainer, fifty athletics trainers
When we use certain nouns "as adjectives" (clothes, sports, customs, accounts, arms), we use them in the plural form:
- clothes shop, clothes shops
- sports club, sports clubs
- customs duty, customs duties
- accounts department, accounts departments
- arms production
How do we write the "noun as adjective"?
We write the "noun as adjective" and the real noun in several different ways:- two separate words (car door)
- two hyphenated words (book-case)
- one word (bathroom)
How do we say the "noun as adjective"?
For pronunciation, we usually stress the first word:- shoe shop
- boat-race
- bathroom
Can we have more than one "noun as adjective"?
Yes. Just like adjectives, we often use more than one "noun as adjective" together. Look at these examples:car production costs: we are talking about the costs of producing cars
noun as
adjective |
noun as
adjective |
noun
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costs
|
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production
|
costs
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car
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production
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costs
|
noun as
adjective |
noun as
adjective |
noun as
adjective |
noun
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coach
|
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team
|
coach
|
football
|
team
|
coach
|
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England
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football
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team
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coach
|
government road accident research centre: we are talking about a centre that researches into accidents on the road for the government
noun as
adjective |
noun as
adjective |
noun as
adjective |
noun as
adjective |
noun
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centre
|
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research
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centre
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accident
|
research
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centre
|
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road
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accident
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research
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centre
|
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government
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road
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accident
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research
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centre
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BIRD HEALTH RESEARCH CENTRE MURDER MYSTERY
To understand headlines like these, try reading them backwards. The above headline is about a MYSTERY concerning a MURDER in a CENTRE for RESEARCH into the HEALTH of BIRDS.
Note, too, that we can still use a real adjective to qualify a "noun as adjective" structure:
- empty coffee jar
- honest car salesman
- delicious dog food
- rising car production costs
- famous England football team coach
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