Adjectives: 1. Adjectives: - Ed and - Ing
Adjectives: 1. Adjectives: - Ed and - Ing
Adjectives: 1. Adjectives: - Ed and - Ing
-ed adjectives:
The commonest –ed adjectives are: annoyed, bored, frighte ned, worrie d, tired,
closed, e xcited, de lighted, disappointed
Opinion adjectives:
Some adjectives give a general opinion. We can use these adjectives to describe almost
any noun:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
General Specific
Size Shape Age Colour Nationality Material
opinion opinion
Some of the commonest -ed adjectives are normally used only after a link ve rb:
annoyed; finished; bored; pleased; thrilled
We say:
Our teacher was ill.
My uncle was very glad when he heard the news.
The policeman seemed to be very annoyed
but we do not say:
We had an ill teacher.
When he heard the news he was a very glad uncle
He seemed to be a very annoyed policeman
We say:
He lives in the eastern district.
There were countless problems with the new machinery.
but we do not say:
The district he lives in is eastern
The problems w ith the new machinery were countless.
When we want to describe how something or someone changes we can use two
comparatives with and:
The balloon got bigge r and bigge r.
Everything is getting more a nd more expensive.
Grandfather is looking older and olde r.
We often use the with comparative adjectives to show that one thing depe nds on
anothe r:
When you drive faster it is more dangerous
> The faster you drive, the more dangerous it is.
When they climbed higher it got colder
> The higher they climbed, the colder it got.
Supe rlative adjectives:
We use the with a superlative:
It was the happiest day of my life.
Everest is the highest mountain in the world.
That’s the best film I have seen this year.
I have three sisters, Jan is the oldest and Angela is the youngest .
3. Intensifiers
Intensifiers:
(Inte rmediate )
We use words like very, really and extremely to make adjectives stronger:
It’s a very interesting story It’s a really interesting story.
Everyone was very excited. Everyone was extremely excited
We also use enough to say more about an adjective, but enough comes after its adjective:
If you are seventeen you are old enough to drive a car.
I can’t wear those shoes. They’re not big enough.
We do not normally use very with these adjectives. We do not say something is "very
enormous " or someone is "very brilliant".
Mitigators are the opposite of intensifiers. When we want to make an adjective less
strong we use these words:
fairly - rather – quite
Warning
quite
When we use quite with a strong adjecti ve it means the same as absolutely:
The food was quite awfu l. = The food was absolutely awfu l.
As a child he was quite brilliant. = As a child he was absolutely brilliant.
a bit - just a bit - a little - a little bit - just a little bit - rather - slightly
Adjectives as intensifiers:
We use some adjectives as intensifiers:
absolute utter - perfect
total - complete real
We often use two nouns together to show that one thing is a pa rt of something e lse:
Warning
We do not use a possessive form for these things. We do not talk about:
The car’s door; the kitchen’s window; the chair’s leg
We often use noun modifiers with nouns ending in -er and -ing:
an office worker; a shopping list;
a jewellery maker; a swimming lesson;
a potato peeler; a walking holiday.
We often put two nouns together and readers/liste ners have work out what they mean.
So:
an ice bucket = a bucket to keep ice in
an ice cube = a cube made of ice
an ice breaker = a ship which breaks ice
the ice age = the time when much of the Earth was covered in ice.