Fun fact!
What do the following adjectives all have in common?
- lacklustre
- cold-blooded
- premeditated
- worthless
The answer is they were all invented by William Shakespeare in order to add detail to his scripts. When the exact word he wanted wasn’t available, he would quite often combine verbs and nouns to create new adjectives.
Introduction to adjectives
Adjectives describenounA naming word for an object, idea, person or place. to tell you more about something.
Adjectives come in several varieties, including descriptive, quantitative, superlative and comparative.
Using adjectives is particularly important in descriptive writing.
Video about the uses of adjectives
Learn about the importance of adjectives and their significance
My name is Amar Latif, and I run a travel company that takes blind and fully sighted people all over the world.
During my school years, I found English quite daunting because I didn't see the relevance.
And now that I've grown older, and obviously I'm blind, I've begun to realise the importance of words—because they are my eyes.
So the holidays are wide-ranging.
We do discovery holidays, activity holidays, relaxing holidays, and sunshine holidays.
It's so important for us to use adjectives in our promotional itineraries and brochures, to describe our holiday experiences, to conjure up in the minds of our customers what they should be expecting.
So we'll use adjectives like exhilarating— you know, you feel something inside you: thrilling, exciting. Your blood starts to race.
And then we have holidays where we're on beautiful beaches, and you're walking along and you can hear the ocean.
And I'll use adjectives like tranquil, calm, relaxing— so the customer knows that they are going to go on that holiday and they're going to chill.
We can use adjectives to compare itineraries— those kinds of adjectives are called comparative adjectives, because you're comparing.
So I might say, “Fuerteventura is a calm, relaxing island, but for a livelier experience you might want to go to Tenerife, which is a bit busy, noisy,” etc.
So the customer knows the difference between the two.
Biggest is a superlative adjective.
So if I'm telling people that we're going to the island of Madeira, and we're climbing the biggest mountain there, then the customers know what they're letting themselves in for.
Why do we use adjectives?
Adjectives can add detail to a noun (such as a person, place, or thing) to make descriptions clearer or more interesting.
Often, they appear directly before a noun in a sentence:
In the noisy town hall some lively discussions took place.
Adjectives can also appear after the noun in some sentences:
The corridor was clean and bright.
The adjectives above can be referred to as descriptive adjectives. These types of adjectives modify the noun in the sentence by adding more information about it.
Similarly, if you describe a noun using a number, this is called a quantitative adjective. These adjectives indicate how many or how much.
I have twenty pounds in my wallet.
There were three boys and two girls.
You were only supposed to eat half of the pizza.
Find the adjectives
Comparative adjectives
One way to describe nouns is by comparing them to something else. One cat might be fiercer, hungrier, faster, softer, fluffier or shyer than another.
The words describing the cat are called comparative adjectives and usually end in –er.
Here are some more examples:
Summer days are longer than winter ones.
My sunflower is taller than yours.
Identify the comparative adjective
Superlative adjectives
We can also compare nouns by using superlative adjectives, which mean that something has more of a particular quality than any other of its kind; that it can't be beaten. Superlative adjectives usually end in –est
She is the strongest player on the best team in the greatest league.
Find the superlative adjective
Key points
Remember
Get the balance right when choosing adjectives in your writing: too many can be overwhelming for a reader; too few and your reader may not have a clear enough picture of what you are describing.
Test your knowledge
Identify all the adjectives
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