adjectives and word order
Overview
In this lesson, you learned that adjectives describe nouns and must come before the noun in English. Adjectives never change form, whether the noun is singular or plural. You can use adjectives with 'be' verbs (am/is/are) to describe people and things.
Introduction
Adjectives are words that describe people, places, and things. They make your English more interesting and help people understand exactly what you mean. In this lesson, you will learn how to use adjectives correctly in English sentences.
Key Concepts
1. What are adjectives? Adjectives describe nouns (people, places, things). Examples: big, small, happy, red, old, new.
2. Word order in English: Adjectives come BEFORE the noun. Pattern: Article + Adjective + Noun. Example: 'a red car' (NOT 'a car red').
3. Adjectives don't change: In English, adjectives stay the same for singular and plural. Example: 'a tall girl' and 'tall girls' (the adjective 'tall' doesn't change).
4. Using 'be' + adjective: We use 'am/is/are + adjective' to describe. Example: 'She is happy.' 'The books are old.'
Examples and Usage
**Example 1:** 'I have a **small dog**.' (adjective + noun) - The adjective 'small' comes before the noun 'dog' - This tells us the size of the dog **Example 2:** 'My sister is **beautiful**.' (be + adjective) - We use 'is' + adjective to describe people - The adjective comes after the verb 'be' *...
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Key Concepts
- Adjectives describe nouns (people, places, things)
- Word order: adjective + noun (e.g., 'a red car')
- Adjectives don't change for plural nouns
- Pattern with 'be': subject + am/is/are + adjective
Exam Tips
- →Always put the adjective BEFORE the noun (not after)
- →Don't add -s to adjectives when the noun is plural
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