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Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Adjective Orders


In English, it is common to use more than one adjective before a noun — for example, “He's a silly young fool,” or “She's a smart energetic woman.” When you use more than one adjective, you have to put them in the right order, according to type.

1. The basic types of adjectives

Opinion
An opinion adjective explains what you think about something (other people may not agree with you).
e.g. silly, beautiful, horrible, difficult
Size
A size adjective, of course, tells you how big or small something is.
e.g. large, tiny, enormous, little
Age
An age adjective tells you how young or old something or someone is.
e.g. ancient, new, young, old
Shape
A shape adjective describes the shape of something.
e.g. square, round, flat, rectangular, oval, spiral
Color
A color adjective, of course, describes the color of something.
e.g. red, blue, green, pink
Origin
An origin adjective describes where something comes from.
French, lunar, American, eastern, Greek
Material
A material adjective describes what something is made from.
e.g. wooden, metal, cotton, paper
Purpose
A purpose adjective describes what something is used for. These adjectives often end with “-ing”.
e.g. sleeping (as in “sleeping bag”), roasting (as in “roasting tin”)

2. Some examples of adjective order


Opinion Size Age Shape Color Origin Material Purpose Noun

small

brown
paper
bag
sexy short

white


dress
lovely long

blonde


hair
new


black German
sports car


Look at the examples below.
  • The shop assistant put the gift into a small brown paper bag.
  • I’m going to a party tonight. I bought a sexy short white dress to wear.
  • Paul sang a slow love song to his girlfriend. 
  • It was so nice to come in from the cold and eat a delicious hot meal
  • She was a beautiful woman with lovely long blonde hair.
  • I just bought a new, black, German sports car
  • Watch out! There is a big black ferocious dog over there. 

Note: It is very unusual to have more than three adjectives.

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