English/Parts of Speech/Adjectives
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English Wikibook (edit) |
General: Introduction - Grammar |
Parts of speech: Nouns - Verbs - Adjectives - Adverbs - Pronouns - Conjunctions - Prepositions - Interjections |
Parts of the sentence: Subjects - Predicates |
Word functions: Subjects - Predicates - Direct Objects - Indirect Objects - Objects of the Preposition |
Types of sentences: Simple Sentences - Complex Sentences |
Types of Phrases: Adjective - Adverb - Noun |
Types of Clauses: Adjective - Adverb - Noun |
Other English topics: Gerunds - Idiomatic Phrases - Spelling - Vocabulary - Punctuation - Syntax - Appositives - Phonics - Pronunciation |
An adjective is a word that describes a noun in a sentence. In short, it is a describing word.
Adjectives come in many types, including:
- Adjectives of quality, for example, "It is a good thing".
- Adjectives of size, for example, "The elephant is a huge animal."
- Adjectives of color, for example, "Look at the red rose."
Adjectives in English always come before the noun - "a big house", not "a house big". Adjectives are always the same and never change for plural - :3 big houses", not 3 "bigs houses".
Many regular adjectives (and adverbs) can be compared.
In addition to regular adjectives, there are two other types:
- Possessive adjectives, that show who owns something (the object).
- Demonstrative adjectives, that describe which thing.
You may learn about these types of adjectives, go back to the last section about verbs, or go on to the next section about adverbs.