English Adjectives: Position and No Plural Agreement
In English, an adjective normally comes before the noun it describes, as in 'a big house' or 'two old books', or after the verb 'to be', as in 'The flowers are beautiful.' Unlike many other languages, English adjectives never change for number or gender: 'old' stays 'old' whether you have one book or two, so it never becomes 'olds'. This means you should not move the adjective after the noun ('a house big') or add a plural -s to it ('reds cars'). Once you place the adjective correctly, it stays exactly the same form every time.
Examples
- a big house a house that is big
- The flowers are beautiful. the flowers have beauty
- two old books two books that are old
The full lesson
Everything in the video, in text.
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English adjectives are wonderfully simple — but only if you put them in the right place and leave them completely alone.
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In many languages, adjectives shift their endings and chase the noun around. English does neither. There are really just two things to learn.
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First, position. An adjective sits in one of two places: directly before the noun it describes, or after the verb to be. That's it.
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Before the noun, the adjective comes first and the noun follows. a big house
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Or place it after the verb to be — and the meaning is the same. The car is red.
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Now the part that makes English easy: the adjective never changes. Not for one or many, not for he or she. One form does every job.
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The noun goes plural, but the adjective stays exactly as it is. It's old, never olds. two old books
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Same after to be. The subject is plural — the flowers — yet beautiful carries no plural ending. The flowers are beautiful.
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Watch one adjective handle singular and plural with zero change. a tall man, two tall men
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One nuance when you stack adjectives: English likes a natural order — opinion, then size, then colour. So it's a big red car, not a red big car.
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Now the two traps. First, don't put the adjective after the noun. It's a red car, never a car red.
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Second, never add a plural -s to the adjective. The noun can be plural, but the adjective stays singular in form.
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So: put the adjective before the noun or after to be, and never change its form. One word, every job.