Tanashia Smith Davis IWW 1 Adjective Essay Nov. 13. 2012 Who I Am Everyone has someone who’s inspired them or made them who they are today. I always looked up to Oprah Winfrey when I watched her shows; I always tend to smile because the things she said. She always was happy and she cared for everyone and made her a lot of money. I always said to myself I wanted to be like Oprah Winfrey‚ I might not make as much money as her but I want to be like her. I push
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A. Background Very briefly describe yourself (age‚ birthplace‚ social class and status when you were growing up‚ current cultural orientation‚ etc.). I was born in San Francisco in 1985 to two young Israeli immigrants. I am the oldest of three and the only daughter. My family was Jewish but very secular‚ and our stance on religion and politics was liberal. I grew up in a middle to upper middle class suburb in the Bay Area where most of my friends were Catholic or Protestant. My current ideals have
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Qualifiying adjectives are "gradable"‚ i.e. it is possible to graduate their intensity‚ by the addition of an adverb of degree‚ such as very‚ quite‚ enough; most qualifying adjectives can also be put into comparative or superlative forms (big‚ bigger‚ biggest). Classifying adjectives cannot be graded: a person is either married‚ or not‚ or dead‚ or not; he or she cannot be "very married"‚ nor "more dead" than another person‚ at least not under normal usage of the words. That being said
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Order of Adjectives & Comma Use with Paired Adjectives In English‚ it is common to use more than one adjective before a noun. For example‚ we can write "He’s a funny young boy‚" 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. It is correct to write‚ "I have a small red car"‚ but it is not correct to write‚ "I have a red small car". When you use two adjectives together‚ you sometimes use "and" between them and you
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An adjective clause (also known as adjectival or relative clause) is a subordinate clause used to modify a noun or a pronoun in the main clause. An adjective clause will meet three requirements: * First‚ it will contain a subject and verb. * Next‚ it will begin with a relative pronoun [who‚ whom‚ whose‚that‚ or which] or a relative adverb [when‚ where‚ or why]. * Finally‚ it will function as an adjective‚ answering the questionsWhat kind? How many? or Which one? The adjective clause
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Adjectives - Comparison - Exercise 1 Fill in the comparative and superlative forms of the adjectives Comparative Superlative 1 old __________ __________ 2 bad __________ __________ 3 difficult __________ __________ 4 large __________ __________ 5 good __________ __________ 6 big __________ __________ 7 easy __________ __________ 8 much __________ __________ 9 little __________ __________ 10 interesting __________ __________
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Adjective Phrases Subordinate clauses‚ like phrases‚ can be used in sentences as if they were single units. One word: The barking dog followed us home. Phrase: The dog‚ barking loudly‚ chased us. Clause: The dog‚ which was barking loudly‚ followed us. An adjective clause is a subordinate clause that modifies a noun or a pronoun. It cannot stand by itself. We need a dog that can guard. An adjective clause usually follows the word that it modifies
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Appearance Adjectives adorable beautiful clean drab elegant fancy glamorous handsome long magnificent old-fashioned plain quaint sparkling ugliest unsightly wide-eyed Condition Adjectives alive better careful clever dead easy famous gifted helpful important inexpensive mushy odd powerful rich shy tender uninterested vast wrong. Size Adjectives big colossal fat gigantic great huge immense large little mammoth massive miniature
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“Normal” isn’t an adjective you wish to hear after putting that much effort into making sure it was spectacular.” “People get mad when you treat them how they treat you.” Eliminate the unnecessary. Storms make trees take deeper roots. "But time is like the ocean‚ you can only hold a little in your hands." The quieter you become‚ the more you are able to hear. “Normal” isn’t an adjective you wish to hear after putting that much effort into making sure it was spectacular.” “People
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DEGREES OF COMPARISSON OF ADJECTIVE Compiled Compiled by by :: Maya Maya F. F. Lina Lina This is a big ball. This ball is bigger than the green ball. This is the biggest ball of the lot. When we use adjectives to compare persons or things‚ we are said to be using degrees of comparison. Ketika kita menggunakan kata sifat untuk membandingan orang atau benda‚ maka kita sebut denga penggunaan degrees of comparison. ADJECTIVES : Degrees of Comparison Positive degree
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