Describing Peoples
What are
adjectives?
Adjectives
are words that describe or modify a person/thing/place/concept (i.e. a noun or
a noun phrase)
in a
sentence. Adjectives are placed before the noun or noun phrase that they
modify. If two adjectives
describe
a noun, use and to link the adjectives. If there are more than two adjectives,
use commas at first,
then use
and before the last adjective (it is rare to have more than three adjectives in
a row):
Examples:
He owns a
yellow car.
Black and
white televisions are very rare.
The
company seeks intelligent, motivated, and energetic people.
Adjectives
are also used on their own, or with fixed expressions such as how or
it/this/that is
Excellent!
This is great!
You work
in advertising? How interesting!
When indefinite
pronouns (i.e. something, someone, anybody) are modified by an adjective, the
adjective
comes after the pronoun:
Examples:
We
watched something fascinating on the news tonight.
In
Washington DC you always see something new.
When an
adjective owes its origins to a proper noun, it is capitalized:
Examples:
French
fries, the English Parliament, the Smithsonian institute, a Victorian house,
etc.
How do I
find or make adjectives?
Adjectives
are very often associated with nouns, and describe various attributes of the
noun:
- size:
a small
company, a big house
- shape:
a round
table, the Oval Office
- age:
a young
man, an old establishment
- color:
blue
skies, a red carpet
- origin:
an
American car, the Spanish football team
-
material:
a wooden house,
a marble building
- etc.
You can
easily create adjectives with many verbs (not all!) if you add the –ed or –ing
endings to the
verb.
However, be careful to make a distinction between the two! Generally, the -ed
ending means that
the noun
described is the receiver of the action implied by the original verb. The -ing
ending means that
the noun
described is the actor:
Examples:
The news
is dramatic. I am shocked. (the news shocks you)
BUT
I hate
shocking documentaries. (the documentaries shock you)
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