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Adjective | Aptitude

Last Updated : 27 Aug, 2025
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An adjective is a word that modifies or describes a noun or pronoun by giving more information about its qualities.

Example:

John is a good boy.
He is intelligent.

In the above sentence, "good" and "intelligent" qualify "John" and tell us the quality of "he".

Types of Adjectives

Some of the main types of adjectives are:

types_of_adjectives

Rules of Adjective

Below are the key rules of adjectives to use them correctly:

Rule 1. Adjectives Modify Nouns and Pronouns
Adjectives describe or modify nouns (people, places, things) and pronouns (he, she, it, they).

Example:

She has a red car.

Rule 2: After linking verbs, adjectives describe the subject
When adjectives describe the subject via a linking verb (e.g., be, seem, appear, become, feel), they come after the verb.

Example:

The sky is blue.

Rule 3: Multiple adjectives follow this specific order
Opinion→Size→Age→Shape→Color→Origin→Material→Purpose

Example:  

A lovely little old rectangular green French silver jewelry box.

Rule 4: Use comparative forms (-er/more) for comparing two things

Example:

"taller," "more interesting"

Rule 5: Use superlative forms (-est/most) for comparing three or more things

Example:

"tallest," "most beautiful"

Rule 6: Never use double comparatives or superlatives

Example:

"more better" / Correct: "better"

Rule 7: Some extreme adjectives can't take "very" (use "absolutely" instead)

Example:

"very perfect" / Correct: "absolutely perfect"

Rule 8: Demonstrative adjectives must match their nouns'the number

Example:

"this book" (singular), "these books" (plural)

Rule 9: Avoid Overusing Adjectives

Tips and Tricks for Adjectives

  1. 1-2 syllable adjectives typically take -er/-est.
    e.g., tall → taller → tallest
  2. 3+ syllable adjectives use more/most.
    e.g., beautiful → more beautiful → most beautiful
  3. Some adjectives are in Irregular forms try to remember them.
    e.g., good → better → best, bad → worse → worst
  4. "As...as" constructions use the base adjective form.
    e.g., She is as tall as her brother
  5. Spelling ending with -y Change -y to -ier (comparative) and -iest (superlative).
    e.g., happy → happier → happiest
    Doubling consonants: Double the final consonant for short adjectives.
    e.g., big → bigger → biggest
  6. In negative equality comparisons use "not as...as".

Also Check:

➣ Adjective Solved Question- Refer Here!

➣ Test your knowledge- Quiz!


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