Personality and Emotions in EnglishA2
Practice key words for personality and emotions to describe yourself and others clearly. Learn and use them in short examples today.
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Prerequisites
Personality and emotions
Personality words describe what a person is like most of the time. Emotion words describe how a person feels in a moment. In everyday English, people use both kinds of words to talk about friends, coworkers, family, and strangers. These words are common in descriptions of People, and many of them also appear in everyday Idioms.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| kind | Someone who is kind treats other people in a gentle and caring way. | ||
| patient | Someone who is patient can wait or deal with problems calmly. | ||
| helpful | Someone who is helpful likes to make things easier for others. | ||
| friendly | Someone who is friendly behaves in a warm and pleasant way. | ||
| polite | Someone who is polite uses good manners and respectful language. | ||
| generous | Someone who is generous likes to give time, money, or things to others. | ||
| thoughtful | Someone who is thoughtful thinks about other people's needs and feelings. | ||
| cheerful | Someone who is cheerful often seems happy and pleasant. | ||
| honest | Someone who is honest tells the truth and does not hide facts. | ||
| reliable | Someone who is reliable can be trusted to do what they promise. |
Positive personality words
Use kind for a person who treats others well. Use friendly for someone who is easy to talk to and pleasant with people. Helpful describes a person who offers support or does useful things for others. Patient means a person can wait, listen, or deal with problems without getting upset quickly. Polite describes someone who uses good manners, says please and thank you, and speaks respectfully. A kind neighbor might bring soup when you are sick, and a polite student waits for the teacher to finish speaking. These words are very useful in Family and Relationships.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| rude | Someone who is rude behaves in a disrespectful way. | ||
| selfish | Someone who is selfish thinks mainly about their own needs. | ||
| impatient | Someone who is impatient gets annoyed when things take too long. | ||
| arrogant | Someone who is arrogant acts as if they are better than others. | ||
| careless | Someone who is careless does things without enough attention. | ||
| lazy | Someone who is lazy avoids work or effort when they should not. | ||
| moody | Someone who is moody changes mood often and without warning. | ||
| stubborn | Someone who is stubborn refuses to change their mind easily. | ||
| mean | Someone who is mean says or does unpleasant things to hurt others. | ||
| dishonest | Someone who is dishonest does not tell the truth. |
Negative personality words
A rude person speaks or acts without respect. Selfish describes someone who thinks only about their own needs. Impatient means a person gets annoyed when things take too long. Arrogant describes someone who thinks they are better than other people. Careless means a person does not pay enough attention and makes avoidable mistakes. In daily life, people may say a driver is careless, a manager is impatient, or a classmate is rude when they interrupt others.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| honest | Someone who is honest tells the truth and is open about facts. | ||
| reliable | Someone who is reliable can be depended on to do what they say. | ||
| independent | Someone who is independent can do things without much help from others. | ||
| curious | Someone who is curious wants to learn or know more. | ||
| cautious | Someone who is cautious thinks carefully before acting. | ||
| quiet | Someone who is quiet does not speak a lot. | ||
| serious | Someone who is serious is focused and not joking. | ||
| practical | Someone who is practical likes useful ideas and actions. | ||
| direct | Someone who is direct says things clearly and without extra words. | ||
| private | Someone who is private does not share personal information easily. |
Neutral personality words
Use honest for someone who tells the truth. Reliable describes a person you can trust to do what they promise. Independent means a person can do things alone without much help. Curious describes someone who wants to learn and ask questions. Cautious means careful and not quick to take risks. A reliable friend arrives on time, a curious child asks many questions, and a cautious driver slows down in bad weather.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| happy | When you are happy, you feel good and pleased. | ||
| sad | When you are sad, you feel unhappy or down. | ||
| angry | When you are angry, you feel upset because of a problem or injustice. | ||
| scared | When you are scared, you feel fear or worry about danger. | ||
| calm | When you are calm, you feel relaxed and not upset. | ||
| tired | When you are tired, you need rest because you have little energy. | ||
| worried | When you are worried, you feel uneasy about a problem or future event. | ||
| surprised | When you are surprised, something unexpected makes you react strongly. | ||
| bored | When you are bored, you feel tired of doing nothing interesting. | ||
| embarrassed | When you are embarrassed, you feel awkward because of something noticeable or unpleasant. |
Basic emotion words
Use happy for a good feeling, sad for a bad feeling, angry when something bothers you, scared when you think something is dangerous, and calm when you feel peaceful and not upset. These are the first emotion words learners need because they appear in simple conversations, signs, and personal stories. A child can be happy at a birthday party, sad after bad news, or scared during a thunderstorm.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| excited | When you are excited, you feel very happy and eager about something. | ||
| nervous | When you are nervous, you feel worried about a possible result. | ||
| disappointed | When you are disappointed, something did not meet your hopes. | ||
| relieved | When you are relieved, a worry has ended and you feel better. | ||
| frustrated | When you are frustrated, you feel upset because something is hard or keeps going wrong. | ||
| anxious | When you are anxious, you feel strong worry or unease. | ||
| proud | When you are proud, you feel pleased about your own or someone else's success. | ||
| ashamed | When you are ashamed, you feel bad because you think you did something wrong. | ||
| hopeful | When you are hopeful, you believe something good may happen. | ||
| overwhelmed | When you are overwhelmed, you feel like there is too much to deal with. |
Stronger emotion words
Use excited when something positive feels energetic and fun. Nervous describes worry or tension before something important. Disappointed means you expected something better and did not get it. Relieved describes the good feeling after a worry ends. Frustrated means annoyed because something is difficult or does not work. A student may feel nervous before an interview, relieved after the exam, and frustrated when the computer freezes again.
| Usage | Explanation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Be plus adjective | Use be plus an emotion adjective to describe a current state directly. | ||
| Feel plus emotion | Use feel plus an emotion word to say how someone experiences the emotion. | ||
| Reason with because | Use because to give the reason for a feeling. | ||
| Question about feelings | Use How do you feel to ask about another person's emotion. | ||
| Past cause of feeling | Use be plus adjective with a past event to explain a reaction. | ||
| Intensity with very | Use very before an adjective to make the feeling stronger. |
Describing feelings in sentences
The most common pattern is be + adjective. Say I am happy, She is tired, or They are nervous. Another very common pattern is feel + adjective. Say I feel sad or He feels calm. Use because to give the reason: I am excited because we are going on vacation. She feels disappointed because the store is closed. In English, the adjective stays the same after be and after feel.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| really | Use really to make an adjective or feeling stronger. | ||
| very | Use very to show a high level of a feeling or quality. | ||
| a bit | Use a bit to show a small amount of a feeling. | ||
| slightly | Use slightly to show only a small change or amount. | ||
| totally | Use totally to show a very strong or complete feeling. | ||
| quite | Use quite to show moderate strength in many everyday comments. | ||
| so | Use so before an adjective to make the feeling stronger in speech. | ||
| extremely | Use extremely to say that a feeling is very strong. | ||
| not very | Use not very to make a feeling weak or low. | ||
| incredibly | Use incredibly to show a very high level of feeling. |
Emotion intensity words
Words like very, really, a bit, slightly, and totally show how strong a feeling is. Very and really make the feeling stronger: I am very tired. She feels really happy. A bit and slightly make the feeling weaker: He is a bit nervous. I feel slightly sad. Totally shows a very strong, complete feeling: We are totally excited. These words usually go before the adjective, and they are common in everyday speech and in Idioms like a bit worried or really fed up.
How are you replies
When someone asks How are you?, short natural replies often use an emotion word plus a small extra phrase. Say I’m good, I’m fine, I’m great, I’m tired, or I’m okay. You can add a reason or a short follow-up: I’m good, thanks. I’m tired today. I’m okay, just busy. In friendly conversation, people often answer briefly before asking back: Pretty good. And you?
| Region | Variant | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| cheeky | In British English, cheeky can describe someone who is playfully rude or bold. | |||
| nervous | In American English, nervous is the most common word for feeling worried or uneasy. | |||
| keen | In British English, keen often means very interested or eager. | |||
| curious | In American English, curious is often used for a strong desire to know more. | |||
| forthright | In British English, forthright can describe someone who speaks directly and clearly. | |||
| direct | In American English, direct commonly describes someone who says things clearly and plainly. |
UK and US word differences
Some personality words feel more common in one variety of English than the other. Cheeky is very common in British English for a person who is a little rude in a playful way, especially a child. In American English, people usually use words like sassy, bold, or simply rude depending on the situation. Nervous and anxious are both used in both varieties, but nervous is the safer everyday choice for a short-term feeling before a test, trip, or meeting, while anxious often sounds stronger and more serious.
Take the Quiz!
You can describe people’s traits and feelings in everyday English.
Now you can use personality words to say what someone is like most of the time and emotion words to say how they feel right now. You can build sentences with be + adjective or feel + adjective, add reasons with because, and adjust intensity with words like very or a bit. You can also answer How are you? naturally and choose vocabulary that fits UK or US English.