Adjectives are words used to tell us more about people or things. Some adjectives give us factual information about the noun (age, size color, etc.) while other provide someone’s evaluation or judgement about something or somebody (nice, horrid, beautiful, etc.). In this article, we’ll look at these two types of adjectives and how they are used in our speech.
Adjectives usually describe nouns and go before the nouns without changing their own forms.
Sometimes adjectives go after the verbs like ‘be’, ‘become’, ‘get’:
Adjectives can belong to different categories, each containing a number of types.
In English adjectives can be fact and opinion.
Fact adjectives provide factual information about the object they describe, e.g. its color, size, material, etc.
When we need to describe our thoughts about somebody or something, we can use opinion adjectives, such as ‘nice’, ‘beautiful’, ‘friendly’, etc.
— Some of them express general opinion (general opinion adjectives):
— Others may express more specific opinion (specific opinion adjectives):
Note: Understanding of fact and opinion adjectives helps to put adjectives in the correct order in a sentence. The general rule says that if fact and opinion adjectives are used in one sentence, opinion adjectives go before fact adjectives. |
Check out this video from World English 808 to learn more about fact and opinion adjectives and their usage:
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