1. What is an Adjective?
An adjective is a word that describes or modifies a noun or pronoun.
It tells what kind, how many, which one, or whose.
Examples:
-
a beautiful dress
-
three apples
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this book
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my car
2. Types of Adjectives
A. Descriptive Adjectives
These describe the quality or characteristic of a noun.
Examples:
-
soft pillow
-
tall man
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blue sky
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delicious food
These are the most common adjectives.
B. Quantitative Adjectives
These show how much or how many.
Examples:
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some water
-
five dogs
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many books
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enough time
C. Demonstrative Adjectives
These point out specific nouns.
Examples:
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this car
-
that house
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these shoes
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those birds
D. Possessive Adjectives
These show ownership or belonging.
Examples:
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my phone
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your pen
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her dress
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their home
Possessive adjectives are always followed by a noun.
3. Order of Adjectives
When using multiple adjectives, we follow a specific order in English:
Opinion → Size → Age → Shape → Color → Origin → Material → Purpose + Noun
Example:
A beautiful (opinion) small (size) old (age) round (shape) blue (color) Italian (origin) ceramic (material) coffee (purpose) cup
 Correct: a beautiful small old blue Italian coffee cup
 Incorrect: a Italian blue old coffee small beautiful cup
4. Comparative and Superlative Adjectives
We use these to compare people or things.
Comparative Adjectives
Used to compare two things.
Usually formed by adding -er or using more.
Examples:
-
tall → taller
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smart → smarter
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beautiful → more beautiful
Structure:
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A is taller than B.
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She is more patient than her sister.
Superlative Adjectives
Used to compare three or more things.
Usually formed by adding -est or using most.
Examples:
-
tall → tallest
-
smart → smartest
-
beautiful → most beautiful
Structure:
-
He is the fastest runner.
-
This is the most expensive item.
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