ADJECTIVE OR ADVERB Exercises
ADJECTIVE OR ADVERB Exercises
ADJECTIVE OR ADVERB Exercises
1. He is a boy. (clever)
13. When the teacher heard about the missing book, he said :"You should be more careful."
(angry)
2. He was so busy with his new computer that he had time to help his mother. (hard)
4. From the top of the mountain he could see across the countryside. (far)
3. It is raining . (heavy)
1. I am tired. (terrible)
9. She doesn't like sports. So, she does any sports (hard).
4. I asked her why she was , but she didn't tell me. (sad)
15. She is a tennis player, but her brother plays . (bad / good)
ADJECTIVE OR ADVERB 11
arrogant badly beautiful beautifully boring clever different easily friendly good interesting nice w
We have got a lot of pupils in our class. Here are some of them: Sally is a girl
because she always gets good marks and she also plays the guitar very . The boys think
Sandra is even and she is the most girl, too. But the girls don't like her because
they think she is and plays volleyball . Everybody likes Pat because he
is and at playing football. And he also plays the saxophone very .
The most pupil is Cindy. She is tall, good looking and all the boys fall in love with her .
She is very clever and she doesn't talk as as a lot of our other girl.
ADJECTIVE OR ADVERB
THE DIFFERENCE
An adjective tells us more about a noun. Example: an expensive car, a clever girl
An adverb tells us more about a verb. Example: He talked nervously.
Irregular forms
good well low low
fast fast straight straight
hard hard extra extra
long long doubtless doubtless
Double forms
hard hard hardly = kaum
near near nearly = beinahe
late late lately = in letzter Zeit
Adjective + adverb
The adverb describes an adjective.
Example: Her necklace was horribly expensive.
adverb adjective
She was terribly sorry.
adverb adjective
Adverb + adverb
The adverb describes an adverb.
Example: They played terribly badly.
adverb adverb
He did his homework absolutely correctly.
adverb adverb