Hello, guys. And welcome to this English course on adjectives.
In todayβs video, Iβm going to tell you everything there is to know about adjectives.
The best way to describe an adjective in English
is to say that itβs a word that describes or clarifies
a noun. It gives you information on people, things,
ideas, nouns, or pronouns. It is very important to understand what adjectives
are and to know how to use them.
Because they are essential when you speak English.
Letβs get started. Adjectives give us so much information about
nouns. Letβs, for example, take a common noun,
βcupβ. And see how many ways there are in English
to describe a cup using different kinds of adjectives.
Letβs see. We can say, βItβs a great cup.β
Just give your opinion. βItβs a big cup.β Talking about the
size of the cup. If you want to talk about the shape of the
cup you could say, βItβs a round cup.β
βItβs an old cup.β If you want to talk about age.
Or if you want to say what color it is, βItβs a white cup.β
Or talking about temperature, βItβs a cold cup.β
βItβs a broken cup.β If you make observations. βItβs a Korean cup.β Talking about origins.
Or you can mention the material. βItβs a plastic cup.β
Or βItβs a coffee cup.β Talking about the purpose of the cup.
Now βcoffeeβ as you know is a noun. But in this case, it can be used as an adjective.
All these adjectives are places before the noun.
Letβs learn more about adjectives. Adjectives can found before the noun.
Itβs called the attribute position. Or after the noun.
Which is called the predicative position. And itβs just as common.
Adjectives which are found after a verb, describe the subject of this verb.
Usually a noun or a pronoun. So if we take the sentence, βThe girl is
nice.β The adjective, βniceβ, refers to the subject
of the sentence, βthe girlβ. But it is placed after the verb βto beβ.
βMy students are happy.β Same thing.
The adjective, βhappyβ, describes the subject of the sentence, βmy studentsβ.
But it is placed after the verb. I hope you understand guys.
Letβs move on to practice now. Letβs now practice finding adjectives in
a few sentences. βIβm a tall woman.β
Can you see the adjective in this sentence? I hope you can.
The adjective is βtallβ. It gives you the height of the woman.
βIβm a British woman.β Now where is the adjective?
The adjective is βBritishβ. Gives you the origins of this woman.
βI have blonde hair.β Now whatβs the adjective in this sentence?
Of course guys, it is βblondeβ. It gives you the color of the hair.
βMy eyes are blue.β Now thatβs a different sentence.
Can you spot the adjective? The adjective is βblue.
βMy eyesβ is the subject of the sentence and the adjective is βblueβ.
βIβm nice.β Again, can you spot the adjective?
And finally, βThe weather is cold.β
Whatβs the adjective? Where is it?
Can you see it? The adjective is βcoldβ.
βThe weatherβ is the subject and the adjective is βcoldβ.
Now in the first three sentences, itβs the attribute position.
Remember? The adjective comes before the noun.
And in the last three sentences, itβs the predicative position.
Remember? The adjective comes after the noun.
And in this case, after the verb βto beβ. I hope you understand this.
Letβs go through the sentences again. This time focusing on pronunciation.
Itβs very important that you repeat the sentences after me
to practice saying these adjectives in a sentence. Okay, letβs get started.
βIβm a tall woman.β Can you repeat after me?
Twice. First, βIβm a tall woman.β
βIβm a tall woman.β Very good.
Moving on. βIβm a British woman.β
Repeat after me. βIβm a British woman.β
βIβm a British woman.β Good.
Third sentence βI have blonde hair.β
So repeat after me please. βI have blonde hair.β
βI have blonde hair.β Very good.
βMy eyes are blue.β Repeat after me.
βMy eyes are blue.β βMy eyes are blue.β
Repeat after me. βIβm nice.β
And finally, βThe weather is cold.β
Please repeat. βThe weather is cold.β
βThe weather is cold.β Excellent job, guys.
Ok, guys. Thank you for watching this video. I hope you now understand what adjectives
are and how to use them in English.
Please be sure to watch my next video as I continue talking about adjectives.
Thank you guys for watching my video. If you like it, please show us your support.
Click on βlikeβ, subscribe to out channel, comment below, and share the video.
Hello, guys. Welcome to this English course on adjectives.
In todayβs video, Iβm going to talk about prefixes and suffixes that are commonly added
to adjectives in English. A prefix is a few letters added to a beginning
of a word to change the meaning of that word. And a suffix is a few letters added to the
end of the word to change the meaning. Weβll get more into detail.
Letβs get started. Letβs take a look at a few adjectives with
prefixes. Again a βprefixβ is a few letters added
to the beginning of the adjective. Mostly to make it negative.
Letβs take a look at a few examples. First we have the prefix βunβ. U, n.
For example, if we take the word, βfairβ, and want to make it negative, we can add u
β n to have the word βunfairβ which is the opposite of fair.
Same goes for βhappyβ. βunhappyβ
βsureβ become βunsureβ. Another prefix is i βn , βinβ.
To make the adjective negative, again, For example, βactiveβ β βinactiveβ.
βappropriateβ βinappropriateβ
βcompleteβ βincompleteβ
The prefix i βr now, βirβ. For example,
βresponsibleβ βirresponsibleβ
βrationalβ βirrationalβ
Then we have the prefix i βm, βimβ. For example,
βpossibleβ βimpossibleβ
And finally, the prefix, βilβ. I β l.
Like, βlegalβ βillegalβ
βliterateβ βilliterateβ
These are just a few examples, guys. There are so many other prefixes in English.
But I hope you now have a better understanding. Letβs move on.
Letβs now talk about suffixes. In English, you can add a few letters to a
noun or a verb to make it into an adjective. Not necessarily a negative adjective.
Itβs not like prefixes. There are so many suffixes in English, but
here is a list of very common ones. We can find a suffix βableβ.
Like, βadorableβ. βcomfortableβ
Also the suffix βenβ, e β n. Like, βbrokenβ.
Like, βChineseβ. βJapaneseβ
βfulβ Like, βwonderfulβ.
Like, βinformativeβ. βtalkativeβ
Like, βawesomeβ. βhandsomeβ
Again, these are just a few examples. There are so many suffixes.
But I hope you now have a good idea of how to use suffixes in English.
Letβs now move on to practice. Okay, guys.
Letβs practice finding adjectives in the following sentences.
And prefixes or suffixes. Letβs have a look.
βI have an uncomfortable seat.β Now, can you spot the adjective, first?
Of course, the adjective here is βuncomfortableβ. Can you see any prefix or suffix?
I do. There is a prefix, which is βunβ.
And there is a suffix as well. The suffix, βableβ.
Okay, so look at how we transformed the word. The first word was βcomfortβ in English.
First, we added a suffix to make it into an adjective, which is βcomfortableβ.
And then we added a prefix, βunβ, to make it negative.
So the seat is not comfortable, it is uncomfortable. Thatβs how prefixes and suffixes can be
used in English. The second sentence, βShe has a black car.β
Can you spot the adjective, first. Of course, itβs the adjective βblackβ.
Is there a suffix or a prefix? No, there isnβt.
Next sentence. βHis father was unhelpful.β
Whatβs the adjective? βunhelpfulβ
Of course. Any prefix, suffix?
Yes, there is a prefix. Again, which is βunβ.
To make the adjective negative. And there is a suffix, βfulβ.
To make the noun βhelpβ into an adjective. βunhelpfulβ
Next sentence. βThe actor is handsome.β
The adjective, of course, is βhandsomeβ. Is there a prefix? No, there isnβt.
Is there a suffix? Of course, βsomeβ.
βhandsomeβ βI hate oily food.β
The adjective is βoilyβ. Of course.
Is there a prefix? There isnβt.
The βyβ is a suffix. You have the word, the noun, βoilβ.
And to make it into an adjective you add the suffix βyβ.
And finally, βShe is a dishonest woman.β
The adjective is βdishonestβ, of course. Do you have a prefix?
We do. Yes. We have the prefix, βdisβ.
It shows this woman is not honest, she is dishonest.
Okay, so thatβs how with prefixes and suffixes we can really transform words in English.
Itβs wonderful isnβt it? There are thousands of prefixes and suffixes.
Again, these are just a few examples. But I hope you now understand how it works
in English and how you can really transform and play with the different words and kinds
of words. Okay, guys. Letβs now review the sentences
together and focus on pronunciation. Repeat after me, please.
βI have an uncomfortable seat.β βI have an uncomfortable seat.β
βShe has a black car.β βShe has a black car.β
βHis father was unhelpful.β βHis father was unhelpful.β
βThe actor is handsome.β βThe actor is handsome.β
βI hate oily food.β βI hate oily food.β
And finally. βShe is a dishonest woman.β
βShe is a dishonest woman.β Excellent guys.
Okay, guys. Thank you for watching this video.
I hoped this helped you understand a bit more about prefixes and suffixes in English.
Keep practicing. It takes practice to get better identifying
prefixes and suffixes, but Iβm sure you can do it.
Make sure you watch the video as I continue talking about adjectives in English.
Thank you. Thank you guys for watching my video.
I hoped this help you. If you liked the video, please show me your
support. Click βlikeβ, subscribe to the channel,
put your comments below if you have some, and share it with your friends.
Hello guys and welcome to this English course on adjectives.
In this video, I will be talking to you about adjectives ending in βedβ or βingβ.
These adjectives are very common in English and they often confuse students and learners
in general. So please be really careful. Listen very carefully.
Repeat after me. Try and understand what the difference is.
Let's get started Adjectives ending in βedβ, describe a
person's feeling. For example, βboredβ.
βI am bored.β Adjectives ending in βingβ describe a
situation or an event. For example, βboringβ.
Let's take a sentence. βThis film is boring.β
Ok that's the event. It's boring.
And because the film is boring, I am bored. That's my feeling.
I hope you get it. Let's get a few more common examples.
For example, βannoyedβ and βannoyingβ. βHe is annoyedβ.
That's a feeling. βThe noise is annoyingβ.
You're now describing the noise. Other example, βconfusedβ, βconfusingβ.
βThe student was confusedβ. βThe English was confusingβ.
βdepressedβ βdepressingβ
βMy mom was depressedβ. βShe watched a depressing TV dramaβ.
βI'm excited.β βTravelling is exciting.β
βfrustratedβ βfrustratingβ
βMy dog is frustrated.β βStaying home all day is frustrating.β
βfrightenedβ βfrighteningβ
βMy little sister is frightened of the dark.β βA dark room is frightening.β
βsatisfiedβ βsatisfyingβ
βMy dad is satisfied.β βHe has a satisfying jobβ.
βWe were shocked by the accident.β βIt was a shocking accidentβ.
βinterestedβ βinterestingβ
βI'm interested in articles.β βI'm reading an interesting articleβ.
Last example, two sentences, two different meanings.
Look at these: βThe teacher was bored.β
βThe teacher was boring.β Now you really have to understand the difference
between those two because the meaning is not the same at all.
When you say βthe teacher was boredβ, you are describing the teacherβs feeling.
Okay, that's how the teacher felt at that time.
He or she was bored. But when you say βthe teacher was boringβ,
you are describing the teacher. Okay, the teacher made the students feel bored
because he or she was boring. Okay, so remember βedβ is for feelings.
And βingβ is to describe events, things, situations.
Okay let's move on to practice now. I now have a few example sentences for you.
Let's have a look together. βWow I am excited or exciting about my new
carβ Now whatβs the correct answer?
What do you think? Now remember βedβ to talk about feelings.
βingβ to describe things. In this case, are you talking about your feelings
or are you describing your new car. Of course you are talking about your feelings.
So βWow I'm excited about my new car.β Second example:
βTry not to get bored or boring when you study English.β
Now what do you think are you talking about feelings are you describing things?
Of course, again, we're talking about feelings in this sentence.
βTry not to get bored when you study English.β Then, βMath is confused or confusing to
me.β? Do you know the answer?
You are describing math to you. It is confusing to you.
So math is confusing to me. βIt was a thrilled or thrilling rollercoaster
ride.β? Now in this case, if you think for a minute,
can a roller-coaster ride feel anything? No it can't.
So it's obviously a description. It was a thrilling rollercoaster ride.
And finally: βMy mother is disappointed or disappointing
in my English scoreβ.? Of course you are talking about your mother's
feeling. She is disappointed in your English score.
Very well guys. I hope you did well and I hope you understand
the difference between βedβ adjectives and βingβ adjectives.
Let's now review the sentences together and focus on pronunciation.
Now listen very carefully and repeat after me please.
βWow, I am excited about my new car.β βWow, I am excited about my new car.β
Good. βTry not to get bored when you study English.β
βTry not to get bored when you study English.β Good guys.
Third sentence. βMath is confusing to me.β
βMath is confusing to me.β Very good.
βIt was a thrilling roller coaster ride.β βIt was a thrilling roller coaster ride.β
βMy mother is disappointed in my English score.β
One last time. βMy mother is disappointed in my English
Okay students. Thank you for watching.
I hope you understood the difference between adjectives ending in βedβ and βingβ.
They are very important as they will allow you to describe how you feel and to
describe things and events and situations. Please keep practicing as this is still a
common mistakes among students. So the more you practice, the better you'll
Thank you guys for watching my video. I hope you've liked it and if you have, please
show me your support. Click βlikeβ, subscribe to our channel,
put your comments below, and share the video with your friends.
Hello guys and welcome to this English course on adjectives.
In this video, I'm gonna talk to you about adjectives order
in a sentence using more than one adjective to modify a noun.
Now this is a very important topic because if you use more than one
adjective to modify a noun, you have to follow a specific order, so you
need to keep watching. Let's get started.
Let's take a look at this adjective order.
It looks like a lot at first, but you will learn very fast and practice will help.
Let's have a look together. First, we will use the adjectives describing
quality or giving your opinion. Like delicious, beautiful, or good.
Then, we will talk about size. Adjectives like tall, short, big.
Then comes age. Like old, young, new, twenty-year-old.
Then comes shape. Adjectives like round, or square.
Then color - red, green, blue. Origin - like Korean, Mexican, or
American. Material - like glass, gold, or wooden.
And finally, purpose adjectives like sport or coffee.
Remember my cup from the first video? Well we could say -
it's a great big old round white Korean plastic cup.
So a great - giving my opinion. big - the size.
old - the age. round - for the shape .
white - the color. Korean - for the
origins. plastic - the material.
That's the adjective order. I cannot break it. I have to follow it.
Don't worry guys. Most of the time you will only use one maybe
two or three adjectives in one sentence. But still you have to follow this order.
Let's now look together at a few sentences with multiple adjectives.
For example, these beautiful young girls went to school.
First, how many adjectives do you see in that sentence?
I see two adjectives beautiful and young. The order is beautiful - your opinion.
And then, 'young' for age. Second example.
I have dirty old running shoes. How many adjectives can you see?
There are three. Dirty - your opinion.
Old -the age And running - which is a purpose
adjectives. Then we have - that's a hot green Korean pepper.
How many adjectives? There are three adjectives.
Hot - your opinion. Green - the colour.
Korean - the origins. And finally, Canada is a nice large country.
Two adjectives. Nice - for your opinion.
And large - for the size. Let's now review the
sentences together for pronunciation. Please repeat after me.
These beautiful young girls went to school. These beautiful young girls went to school.
I have dirty old running shoes. I have dirty old running shoes.
Good. That's a hot green Korean pepper.
That's a hot green Korean pepper. Very nice. And finally,
Canada is a nice large country. Canada is a nice large country.
Good job guys. Let's now move on to more practice.
Okay guys you are experts now. Time to move on to some extra practice.
I have sentences for you - some of them are correct - some of them are not.
And it's up to you to tell me. Let's have a look.
She is a tall British woman. Now how many adjectives can you see in
this sentence? I see two adjectives.
And is the order correct? Tall - is the size.
British - the origins. So it is correct. Yes.
Size comes before origins. She is a tall British woman.
I have a red big ball. How many adjectives?
Two. And is the order correct?
Red is the color and big is the size.
Well no it isn't. It should be - I have a big red ball.
Size comes before color. I got a gold new watch.
Again, I suppose you know - two adjectives. Gold for the material.
and new for the age. And age comes before material so it should
My mother has red long hair. We have two adjectives.
Red for the colour. And long - the size.
And size comes before color so it should be, My mother has a long red hair.
And finally, this is a cute little white puppy.
Three adjectives. Is the order correct?
what do you think? Well it is correct.
We have 'cute' for your opinion. ' 'little' for the size.
'white' for the color. And the order is correct.
This is a cute little white puppy Okay guys.
Thank you for watching this video. I hope this helped you understand adjective
order. This is not that difficult.
My students learn this order very quickly and I'm sure you will, too.
That's it for this video. I hope to see you in the next one. Bye.
Thanks guys for watching my video.
If you've liked it, please show us your support by clicking like,
and sharing it with all your friends. See you.
Hello students and welcome back to my English course on adjectives.
In this video, I'm going to talk to you about intensifiers and mitigators.
Now what are those? Don't be scared of their names.
Intensifiers are simply words that will make adjectives stronger.
They will give adjectives more power or more emphasis.
For example, two very common intensifiers in English are βreallyβ and βveryβ.
Mitigators on the other hand, make the adjectives weaker like the words brother or family.
But we're gonna go into a little more detail. Keep watching.
Let's start with intensifiers. And I have a list of intensifies for you.
Of course these are not all of them, but it's a good start because they are very common
in English. Let's have a look.
really This video is really interesting.
The adjectives in this sentence is interesting and we make it stronger with the intensifier,
βreallyβ. It's really interesting.
very For example, I'm very happy to learn English.
The adjective is βhappyβ. And we give it more power with the intensifier.
very I am very happy to learn English.
Other intensifiers include absolutely. or example your new dress is absolutely amazing.
βIt's extremely cold outside.β βincrediblyβ
For example, βYour son is incredibly smart.β βcompletelyβ
βMy wallet is completely empty.β unusually
βThe classroom was unusually quiet.β And finally, βenoughβ.
βHe isn't old enough to drive.β Now for this last sentence, the adjective
is old and II intensifier is enough. It's a special case because as you can hear
and see, βenoughβ always comes after the adjective.
Intensifiers are commonly used with comparative and superlative adjectives.
For example, with comparative adjectives, we offer news much.
For example, βHe runs much faster than me.β βFasterβ is the comparative form of the
adjective βfastβ. And to intensify the comparison, we use the
intensifier βmuchβ. So he runs much faster than me.
We also use βa lotβ. For example, βThis red bag is a lot heavier
than this white bagβ. βheavierβ is the comparative form of the
adjective βheavyβ. And we make it even more powerful with βa
lot heavierβ. And we also use βfunβ.
For example, βShe is far taller than meβ. βtallerβ is the comparative of βtallβ.
We make it more powerful with βfarβ. βFar taller than meβ.
Now with superlative adjectives, we can use βeasilyβ.
For example, βThis is easily the best restaurant in townβ.
βbestβ is the superlative form of the adjective βgoodβ.
And we make it even more powerful by saying, βeasily the best restaurantβ.
And we also use βby farβ. For example, βSarah is by far the smartest
girl in classβ. Let's move on to mitigators.
Now mitigators are the opposite of intensifiers. They weaken the adjectives.
Let's look at a few examples. Mitigators include βfairlyβ.
For example, βIt's fairly sunny todayβ. The adjective βsunnyβ is weakened by the
mitigator βfairlyβ. So it's not sunny it's a bit less than sunny.
Other mitigator βratherβ. So when I say, βI'm rather tiredβ,
I'm not exactly tired. I'm a bit less.
The adjective is less powerful because of this βratherβ.
Other example, βprettyβ. βIt's pretty expensiveβ.
Which means it's not expensive. It's a little bit less.
Oh quite like, βThe movie was quite goodβ. The adjective βgoodβ is less powerful
because of this βquiteβ. Now be very careful because if you use βquiteβ
with an extreme adjective such as βterribleβ, βperfectβ, βenormousβ, or βexcellentβ
β quite means βabsolutelyβ.
It becomes an intensifier. For example, βShe is quite gorgeous.β
Means she is absolutely gorgeous. It's more powerful because of the intensified
βquiteβ. So be very careful when you use βquiteβ
because depending on the adjective that you choose it has a different meaning.
And it can be either an intensifier or a mitigator. Let's move on.
Just as intensifiers, mitigators can be used with comparative adjectives.
Let's look at a few examples. We can use βa bitβ.
For example, βHe's a bit faster than meβ. When you say, βHe's a bit faster than me,β
it's less powerful than βHe's faster than me.β
So βa bitβ it's mitigates it weakens βfasterβ. Same goes for βratherβ.
For example, βThis dress is rather nicer than that dressβ.
It weakens the comparison the nicer. Third case we can say βa little bitβ.
For example, βThere's a little bit more rain today than yesterdayβ.
It's less powerful then. There's more rain.
And finally we can say, βslightlyβ. For example, βMy car is slightly older than
your carβ. So it's just a little bit older than your
car. It's weak because of this mitigator.
Let's now move on to practice. I want things to be very clear so I have a
few example sentences for you guys. And I want you to tell me if you see an intensifier
or a mitigator. Let's have a look first.
βIt's a very interesting gameβ. Now what's the adjective in that sentence?
βinterestingβ of course. What about βveryβ.
Is it an intensifier or a mitigator? What do you think?
It's an intensifier of course. It's a very interesting game.
It's more powerful thanks to this βveryβ. The second sentence, βShe cooks fairly good
pastaβ. Now the adjective in this sentence is βgoodβ.
I'm sure you know what about βfairlyβ. Is it an intensifier or a mitigator?
It's a mitigator guys. The adjective βgoodβ is less powerful
because of βfairlyβ. βShe cooks fairly good pastaβ.
The third example, βHe's quite brilliant at speaking Englishβ.
The adjective is βbrilliantβ. Now just a hint.
It's an extreme adjective. βbrilliantβ is a very strong adjective,
so what about βquiteβ? Is it an intensifier or a mitigator?
It is an intensifier of course because the adjective is extreme.
I hope you got that. Next example.
βShe's a bit younger than I amβ. The adjective is actually a comparative adjective.
In this sentence, βyoungerβ a bit acts as a mitigator of course.
And finally, βMy dog is much fatter than my catβ.
Again, it's a comparative adjective βfatterβ. And what about βmuchβ?
What do you think? Intensifier, mitigator?
It's an intensifier. It's much fatter than my cat.
Let's go through the sentences again and focus on pronunciation.
Please repeat after me. It's a very interesting game.
One more time. It's a very interesting game.
She cooks fairly good pasta. She cooks fairly good pasta.
Third example guys. He's quite brilliant at speaking English.
One more time. He's quite brilliant at speaking English.
Moving on. She's a bit younger than I am.
She's a bit younger than I am. And finally, my dog is much fatter than my
cat. My dog is much fatter than my cat.
Excellent guys. Thank you guys for watching the video.
I hope this has helped. Now using intensifiers and mitigators takes
But I'm sure you can do it and it's worth it.
It will make a true difference to your speaking skills.
Thank you for watching. See you next time.
Thank you guys for watching my video and for watching this
English course on adjectives. If you want to see more videos on adjectives
and other things please show us your support.
Click βlikeβ, subscribe to the channel, put