Adjectives: word order (a nice
new house), Adjectives after verbs (You look tired)
A. Sometimes we use two or
more adjectives together:
* My brother lives in a nice
new house.
* In the kitchen there was 'a
beautiful large round wooden table.
Adjectives like
new/large/round/wooden are fact adjectives. They give us factual information
about age,
size, colour etc.
Adjectives like nice/beautiful
are opinion adjectives. They tell us what somebody thinks of something or
somebody.
Opinion adjectives usually go
before fact adjectives.
a nice(opinion) long(fact)
summer holiday
an interesting(opinion)
young(fact) man
an delicious(opinion)
hot(fact) vegetable soup
a beautiful(opinion) large
round wooden(fact) table
B. Sometimes we use two or more
fact adjectives. Very often (but not always) we put fact adjectives in
this order:
1. how big? -> 2. how old?
-> 3. what color? -> 4. where from? -> 5. what is it made of? ->
NOUN
a tall young man (1 -> 2)
a large wooden table (1 ->
5)
big blue eyes (1 -> 3)
an old Russian song (2 ->
4)
a small black plastic bag (1
-> 3 -> 5)
an old white cotton shirt (2
-> 3 -> 5)
Adjectives of size and length
(big/small/tall/short/long etc.) usually go before adjectives of shape and
width
(round/fat/thin/slim/wide etc.):
a large round table a tall thin girl a long narrow street
When there are two colour
adjectives, we use and:
a black and white dress
a red, white and green flag
but a long black dress (not 'a
long and black dress')
C. We say 'the first two
days', 'the next few weeks', 'the last ten minutes' etc.:
* I didn't enjoy the first two
days of the course. (not 'the two first days')
* They'll be away for the next
few weeks. (not 'the few next weeks')
D. We use adjectives after
be/get/become/seem:
* Be careful!
* I'm tired and I'm getting
hungry.
* As the film went on, it
became more and more boring.
* Your friend seems very nice.
We also use adjectives to say
how somebody/something looks, feels, sounds, tastes or smells:
* You look tired./I feel
tired./She sounds tired.
* The dinner smells good.
* This tea tastes a bit
strange.
But to say how somebody does
something you must use an adverb (see Units 99-100):
* Drive carefully! (not 'Drive
careful')
* Susan plays the piano very
well. (not 'plays...very good')
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar