to be – like am, is, are, was, or were – the next word is often an adjective. For example, in “I am tired” or “She is happy,” the words tired and happy are adjectives. I’ll also show you other verbs that work the same way, like get, become, feel, look, taste, and appear. You’ll also learn how to tell the difference between an adjective and a noun. By the end of this class, you’ll be able to find adjectives quickly and use them correctly in sentences.
5 COMMENTS
6 out of 6. im clever af tbh
It seems to be a good lesson.
I would give the next definition what adjectives are — An adjective is a word that modifies a noun, providing descriptive information about this noun: a quality, a characteristic, a state of being, a number/quantity, an origin, a material, a size, a shape. When an adjective goes after a linking verb (like to be), it functions as a complement of a subject. When the present simple active participle (e.g. interesting) or the past participle (tired) modifies a noun, it’s a verbal adjective.
Thank you
Thank you so much
I really enjoy learning from you