Tuesday, 20 December 2016

Grammar Test

Test is originally from Englishjet.com

Friday, 16 December 2016

Writing a critical essay


Extreme and Regular Adjectives

What Are Extreme Adjectives?

Extreme Adjectives in English
“Cold” is a regular adjective, and “freezing” is an extreme adjective.
Adjectives are words that describe the qualities of something. Some adjectives in English are gradable – that means you can have different degrees or levels of that quality. For example, the weather can be a little cold, rather cold, very cold, or extremely cold.
Extreme adjectives or non-gradable adjectives are words that mean “extremely + adjective” – for example, “freezing” means “extremely cold.” The weather can’t be “a little bit freezing” or “very freezing” – because the word “freezing” itself automatically means “extremely cold.”

Regular & Extreme Adjectives List

Regular AdjectiveExtreme Adjective
angryfurious
badawful, terrible, horrible
bighuge, gigantic, giant
cleanspotless
coldfreezing
crowdedpacked
dirtyfilthy
funnyhilarious
goodwonderful, fantastic, excellent
hotboiling
hungrystarving
interestingfascinating
oldancient
prettygorgeous
scaryterrifying
smalltiny
surprisingastounding
tiredexhausted
uglyhideous

Special Rules For Extreme Adjectives

1) NO COMPARATIVES/SUPERLATIVES.

With regular adjectives, we can use comparatives and superlatives to compare two or more things:
  • My house is big.
  • My neighbor’s house is bigger than mine.
    (comparative)
  • My parents’ house is the biggest house on the street.
    (superlative)
With extreme adjectives, we don’t use comparatives and superlatives:
  • My parents’ house is enormous.
  • My parents’ house is more enormous / the most enormous.

2) USE DIFFERENT ADVERBS WITH EXTREME ADJECTIVES.

With regular adjectives, we can use these adverbs:
  • a little, a bit, slightly, fairly, rather
  • very, extremely, immensely, intensely, hugely
Examples:
  • I’m rather hungry. / I’m very hungry.
  • This room is a bit dirty. / This room is extremely dirty.
  • We’re a little tired. / We’re immensely tired.
With extreme adjectives, we CANNOT use these adverbs:
  • I’m rather starving. / I’m extremely starving.
However, there are other adverbs we can use to give additional emphasis to the extreme adjective:
  • absolutely
  • completely
  • utterly
Examples:
  • I’m absolutely furious.
  • We’re completely exhausted.
  • The movie was utterly terrifying.
The words pretty and really can be used with both regular and extreme adjectives:
  • This room is pretty dirty. (regular)
  • This room is pretty filthy. (extreme)
  • The party is really crowded. (regular)
  • The party is really packed. (extreme)

Absolute Adjectives

Another type of extreme adjective is called an “absolute” adjective. 
These are words that are either “yes or no.” For example, dead – you can’t be “a little bit dead” or “very dead” – either YES, you are dead, or NO, you’re not dead.
Here’s a list of absolute adjectives and their opposites (this list is not complete; it only shows some examples):
Absolute AdjectiveOpposite
completeincomplete
equalunequal
essentialnon-essential; extraneous
deadalive
fatalnot fatal
firstlast / final
fullempty
idealnot ideal
impossiblepossible
infinitefinite
marriedsingle / divorced / separated / widowed
perfectimperfect
pregnantnot pregnant
uniquenot unique
universalnot universal
unknownknown
truefalse

NOTE:

You might hear expressions like these in spoken English:a
“That’s very true.”
“It’s the very first time…”
“This shirt is more unique than that one.”
These sentences are not technically correct, because we shouldn’t use the words “very” or “more” with absolute adjectives – but native speakers don’t always follow the rules!

Copied from: https://www.espressoenglish.net/extreme-adjectives-in-english/