1 / 9

Part 12

Part 12. Units 40 43. Unit 40 Comparative. THAN , not THEN (I ate, then I watched TV.) ADJ-er than Most one syllable adjectives Change y  ier (easy, busy, heavy) More ADJ than Most two (and more) syllable adjectives Less ADJ than For one and two syllables; no smaller form of –er

leon
Download Presentation

Part 12

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Part 12 Units 4043

  2. Unit 40Comparative • THAN, not THEN (I ate, then I watched TV.) • ADJ-er than • Most one syllable adjectives • Change y  ier (easy, busy, heavy) • More ADJ than • Most two (and more) syllable adjectives • Less ADJ than • For one and two syllables; no smaller form of –er • There are plenty of exceptions. (good, bad)

  3. Unit 40 - Comparative Questions • Which city is larger, Seoul or Rome? • Seoul is larger than Rome. • (make a y/n question) • Seoul is smaller than Rome. • (make a y/n question)

  4. Unit 41 – Adverbs of Manner • Usually, add –LY to the adjective form • Usual = adj. Usually = adv. • Plenty of exceptions • She worked hard. She hardly worked. • Lively, lonely, friendly are adjectives • Good – adj. well = adv.

  5. Unit 42 Enough, Too/Very, as [tall] as • ENOUGH • after the adjective • She is rich enough [in order] to take vacations often. • Too/Very • Before the adjective • Too =  very =  • The doctor is very busy. • The doctor is too busy [in order] to see you.

  6. As … as • As [adjective/adverb] as • Pretty much equally • She is as pretty as a picture. • He cooks as well as his mother. • NOT as adj/adv] as • The first one is less • She is not as pretty as a picture • He doesn’t cook as well as his mother.

  7. The Same [noun] as • If you want to use as adjective as, but can’t think of an adjective, use the same as with these forms. • My first name is the same as yours. • I have the same first name as you (do). • Different From • Obama is different from Bush. • Boys are different from girls.

  8. Unit 43 – Superlative • THE adjective-est • Of course, there are irregular forms • Good best • -y  -iest • Long adjectives  the most adjective • He is the tallest student [in the class].

  9. (#43) One of the adj-est • She is one of the best students. • It is one of the highest mountains. • They are some of the best students. • They are some of the highest mountains.

More Related