adjective  (noun): a part-of-speech that modifies or describes a noun or a pronoun

An  adjective  is one of the nine parts of speech.

An  adjective is a word that tells us more about a noun. It "describes" or "modifies" a noun (The big dog was hungry ). In these examples, the adjective is in bold  and the noun that it modifies is in italics.

An adjective often comes BEFORE a noun:

  • green car
  • dark sky
  • an interesting story

And sometimes an adjective comes AFTER a verb:

  • My car is green.
  • The sky became dark.
  • His story seemed interesting.

But  adjectives can also modify pronouns (She is beautiful ). Look at these examples:

  • They were empty.
  • I thought it seemed strange.
  • Those  are not expensive.

Note that we can often use two or more adjectives together (a beautiful young French lady / it is black and white).

The adjective is the enemy of the noun
This is sometimes said 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).

Adjective Form

Some adjectives have particular endings, for example:

  • -able/-ible:  washable, credible
  • -ish/-like:  childish, childlike
  • -ful/-less:  careful, careless
  • -ous:  dangerous, harmonious
  • -y:  dirty, pretty

However, many adjectives have no obvious form.

Comparative, Superlative

Most adjectives can be comparative or superlative, for example:

  • big, bigger, biggest
  • good, better, best
  • beautiful, more beautiful, most beautiful

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