adjectives and adverbs
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Transcript adjectives and adverbs
Adjectives and
Adverbs
Adjective + Noun
• Jason is a funny boy.
• My classmate is a smart girl.
• Our professor was an old man.
Subject + verb + adjective
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After waiting for an hour, she became impatient.
Today the sea looks calm.
The new teacher appears friendly.
The question doesn’t seem difficult.
The story sounds interesting.
I said I was sorry, but he remained angry.
BE CAREFUL!
• The verbs BE, LOOK, SMELL, SOUND, TASTE, APPEAR, FEEL, REMAIN,
and SEEM are not used in present continuous tense when used
with adjectives. (GET and BECOME can be used in present
continuous).
• With adjectives, these verbs do not mean and action, and they do
not take an object.
• If there is an object, their meaning is different. Then, they are
action verbs, and they are used with adverbs.
e.g. Your friend looks nice. (Simple present tense, no object, adjective).
e.g. The policeman is looking at the building carefully. (action verb,
object, adverb).
ADVERBS
• Adverbs describe verbs:
e.g. My classmate speaks Spanish well.
John cleans the house badly.
• Adverbs describe adjectives or adverbs:
e.g. My classmate speaks Spanish very well.
His accent is so good.
• Adverbs can describe whole sentences:
e.g. Normally, she leaves the office at five.
Unfortunately, today she’s working until ten p.m.
FORMING ADVERBS
• Sometimes, we can form adverbs by simply adding –ly to an adjective:
e.g.
nice
→ nicely
quick → quickly
sudden → suddenly
sad
→ sadly
• Sometimes, the spelling changes when we add –ly:
e.g.
happy → happily
terrible → terribly
careful → carefully
true
→ truly
• Some adjectives do not take –ly. These have irregular adverbs:
e.g.
late
→ late
early
→ early
fast
→ fast
straight → straight
hard
→ hard
good
→ well
BE CAREFUL!
Some adjectives end in –ly. These do not take another –ly. We
do not use these as adverbs:
e.g. friendly, lovely, ugly, costly, etc.
Adjective + ENOUGH
• “enough” means the necessary amount, just what you need.
It comes after the adjective.
e.g. These pants are not long enough. They are too short.
e.g. This dress is not large enough for me . It is too small for me.
e.g. Sit here, the couch is big enough for both of us.
adverb+ ENOUGH
• Similarly, we can use “enough” after adverbs:
e.g. He woke up early enough, so he didn’t miss the bus.
e.g. I can’t write quickly enough. You’re speaking too fast. Can
you speak slowly?
ENOUGH + NOUN
e.g. I want to make a cake. Do we have enough eggs?
With purpose (to+v)
e.g. The water was warm enough for us to swim.
e.g. The coffee is not sweet enough to drink.
Can I have some milk and sugar?
e.g. That athlete’s running fast enough to win the race!
e.g. There isn’t enough shampoo to wash my hair. Let’s go shopping.
So+adjective+that
We use this to join reason with result:
e.g. Reason: She was tired. Result: She slept at the concert.
→ She was so tired that she slept at the concert.
e.g. Reason: My shopping bags were heavy. Result: My arms hurt.
→ My shopping bags were so heavy that my arms hurt.
We can use this with adverbs too.
e.g. She talks fast. I don’t understand her.
→ She talks so fast that I don’t understand.
(She talks too fast for me to understand).
We use this to join reason with result:
e.g. Reason: She was tired. Result: She slept at the concert.
→ She was so tired that she slept at the concert.
e.g. Reason: My shopping bags were heavy. Result: My arms hurt.
→ My shopping bags were so heavy that my arms hurt.
We can use this with adverbs too.
e.g. She talks fast. I don’t understand her.
→ She talks so fast that I don’t understand.
(She talks too fast for me to understand).