Language/English/Grammar/How-do-you-use-Adjectives

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How do you use Adjectives in English?

You can use adjectives in the ways suggested below.

Use two or more adjectives to describe a noun in greater detail[edit | edit source]

E.g.

• small grey cat,

• desperate, brazen thief

Show comparison and contrast using parallel phrases such as ‘not only … but also’, ‘as … as’[edit | edit source]

E.g.

• Beatrice is not only intelligent, but also hardworking.

• Tom is as strong as his father.

Use adjectives to express opinions[edit | edit source]

E.g.

• What a boring play! The director was unimaginative.

Examples[edit | edit source]

Adjectives describe many different things, such as size, shape, colour, quality, origin or nationality, material, and the speaker’s or writer’s opinion.

It is common to find two or more adjectives before a noun. However, they cannot be strung together randomly; rather, they follow a fairly strict order, from top to bottom:

Observation/Opinion  : lovely, boring, beautiful, fascinating 
Size :  petite, gigantic, high, long 
Shape :  round, square, oval, circular 
Age :  old, new, young 
Colour :  red, blue, green, yellow 
Nationality/Origin  :  Chinese, American, British, Christian
Material :  gold, silver, silk, linen 

E.g.

• small old wooden box

• beautiful colourful Turkish rug

Sources[edit | edit source]

https://www.languagecouncils.sg/goodenglish/-/media/sgem/document/additional-sgem-resources/pdf/grammar-rules-_-speak-good-english-movement.pdf?la=en

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