Descriptive Adjectives in EnglishA2
Discover how descriptive adjectives color English sentences and bring nouns to life. Learn usage, placement, and practical examples.
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Prerequisites
What Adjectives Do
Adjectives describe nouns by naming qualities such as size, color, shape, age, origin, material, and condition. They help speakers identify, compare, and distinguish people, places, and things in a sentence. For the broader sentence pattern, adjectives depend on noun structure and word order, so related study of Nouns and Word Order supports accurate use.
Adjective Position
Attributive adjectives appear before a noun, while predicative adjectives appear after a linking verb such as be, seem, or feel. In English noun phrases, a determiner usually comes first, then descriptive adjectives, then the noun. Some adjectives are predicative only, including alive and asleep, so they do not normally appear before a noun.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Attributive adjectives come before the noun. | ||
| Predicative adjectives come after a linking verb. | ||
| Predicative only adjectives follow a linking verb. |
Adjective Order
When several adjectives appear before one noun, English favors a common order from opinion and size through age, shape, color, origin, material, and purpose. Speakers may sometimes shift this order in informal speech, but the standard sequence is expected in careful writing. For broader adjective placement patterns, see Adjective Placement.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Opinion usually comes before size. | ||
| Color usually comes before origin. | ||
| Material usually comes before purpose. |
Coordinate Adjectives
Coordinate adjectives are equal modifiers of the same noun, so they are separated with commas. They describe the noun independently rather than forming a fixed sequence. This pattern is common when two qualities are judged as parallel descriptions of one noun.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Equal adjectives can be separated by a comma. | ||
| Each adjective can modify the noun on its own. | ||
| The comma signals coordination rather than fixed order. |
Degree Words
Gradable adjectives can take degree words such as very, quite, and extremely, while non gradable adjectives usually resist these modifiers. Degree words show how strong a quality is and often help speakers soften or intensify a description. Regional preference can affect choices in this area, and some varieties favor different degree words in everyday speech.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Gradable adjectives accept degree modifiers. | ||
| Non gradable adjectives do not normally use strong degree modifiers. | ||
| Degree words show intensity. |
Comparison Forms
Comparative adjectives compare two things, and superlative adjectives compare three or more. Short adjectives often take er and est, while longer adjectives usually take more and most. Some forms are irregular, and good becomes better and best, while bad becomes worse and worst.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Short adjectives often use er for the comparative. | ||
| Longer adjectives often use more for the comparative. | ||
| Good has irregular comparison forms. |
Adjective Complements
Many adjectives are followed by a fixed preposition or complement, such as afraid of, full of, or similar to. These combinations are learned as adjective patterns because the preposition belongs to the adjective rather than to the noun. This structure is useful for Adjective Formation and for the correct placement of adjective phrases in larger sentences.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Some adjectives require of after them. | ||
| Some adjectives require to after them. | ||
| Some adjectives take a complement phrase. |
Participle Adjectives
Present participles and past participles often function as adjectives and describe states, causes, or results. A present participle such as interesting usually describes something that causes a feeling, while a past participle such as broken usually describes the result or condition. These forms are especially important in Adjective Formation and in the broader system of Adjective Placement.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Present participle adjectives often describe a cause. | ||
| Past participle adjectives often describe a result. | ||
| Participles can behave like ordinary descriptive adjectives. |
Nominal Adjectives
Some adjectives can stand alone as nouns when the meaning is understood from context. In these cases, the adjective names a group, a category, or an abstract idea rather than modifying a visible noun. This pattern appears often in formal writing and general reference.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| An adjective can name a group of people. | ||
| An adjective can name an abstract category. | ||
| The noun may be left out when context is clear. |
Adjective Overview
Descriptive adjectives give English sentences precision by identifying qualities, arranging modifiers, and expressing degree, comparison, and grammatical pattern. They may appear before nouns or after linking verbs, may combine in a standard order, and may govern prepositions or participial forms. Mastery of these patterns supports clear modification and prepares learners for Comparative Adjectives and Superlative Adjectives.