Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Directions: Press F5 to begin the slide show

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Directions: Press F5 to begin the slide show"— Presentation transcript:

1 Directions: Press F5 to begin the slide show
Directions: Press F5 to begin the slide show. Press the enter key to view each part of the review.

2 Adjectives Grade Seven

3 What are Adjectives? Adjectives are modifiers. They modify nouns or pronouns. This means they change the image of a noun or pronoun. Adjectives can be located by asking the questions: What kind? Which one? How many? How much?

4 Picture a car in your mind.
What are Adjectives? Picture a car in your mind. Do you have an image in your head? Now make it red.

5 What is an Adjective? Now make it fast.

6 Now make it old-fashioned.
What is an Adjective? Now make it old-fashioned.

7 What is an Adjective? Now make it broken.

8 What is an Adjective? Now make it green.

9 There are two kinds of adjectives:
What is an Adjective? Adjectives change the meaning of a noun by somehow changing the image of it. That’s why they are called modifiers. There are two kinds of adjectives: descriptive and limiting.

10 Descriptive Adjectives
DESCRIBE! The add some sensory image to your sentence which allows the reader to see, smell, hear, touch, or taste something in the sentence. All of the modifiers in the earlier section of the slide show concerning the car were descriptive adjectives. They made the car red, fast, old-fashioned, broken, and green. Those words are all adjectives! Descriptive adjectives make writing much better!

11 Proper Adjectives One type of descriptive adjective is called the proper adjective. Proper adjectives are derived from, or come from, proper nouns. This means that they must always be capitalized. Proper adjectives sometimes are formed by adding a suffix to the proper noun.

12 Examples of Proper Adjectives
Proper Noun Proper Adjective America American France French China Chinese Pennsylvania Pennsylvanian

13 Proper Adjectives Sometime proper nouns don’t change in form at all when they become proper adjectives. Ex. President Kennedy was a good leader. (In this sentence President Kennedy is a person; therefore, he is a noun.) Ex. The Kennedy Library is very large. (in this sentence Kennedy is describing the library; therefore, it is an adjective.)

14 Limiting Adjectives Limiting adjectives point out nouns.
There are five kinds of them: Articles Possessives Demonstratives Indefinites Interrogatives

15 There are three articles:
an the “The” is called a definite article because it points out nouns more specifically. “A” and “an” are called indefinite articles because they do not point nouns out as specifically.

16 Articles “The” can be used before both singular and plural nouns.
Ex. the cat, the houses “A” and “an” can only be used before singular nouns. Ex. a book, an elephant

17 Articles “The” can be used before both vowels and consonants.
Ex. the ant, the car “A” must be used before consonant sounds. Ex. a duck, a fossil, a uniform “An” must be used before a vowel sounds. Ex. an umbrella, an excuse

18 Possessive Adjectives
Possessive adjectives show ownership of a noun. These words are the same as the possessive pronouns. There are fourteen possessive adjectives: my, mine our, ours your, yours your, yours his, her, hers, its their, theirs

19 Demonstrative Adjectives
Demonstrative adjectives point out a noun. They are the same words as the demonstrative pronouns. There are four demonstratives: this that these those

20 Indefinite Adjectives
Indefinite adjectives point out nouns. They often tell “how many” or “how much” of something. There are seventeen of them: all, any, another, both, each, either, few, little, many, more, most, much, neither, one, other, several, some

21 Interrogative Adjectives
Interrogative adjectives are used to ask questions. Three of them were also interrogative pronouns: which what whose

22 Limiting Adjectives Many limiting adjectives have also been studied as pronouns. How do you tell when they are pronouns and when they are adjectives? -If a word is a pronoun, it will be renaming a person, place, or thing. Ex. That is a pencil. (That is renaming the pencil; therefore, it is a pronoun.) -If a word is an adjective, it will be pointing out a noun. Ex. That pencil is big. (That is pointing out a pencil, and pencil is a noun; therefore, it is an adjective.)

23 Location of Adjectives
Adjectives can be located in three places in a sentence. The most common location is directly in front of the noun it is modifying. Ex. the big dog, the new toy Another location is after a linking verb or verb of condition. These are called predicate adjectives. Ex. The game was interesting. 3. The final location of adjectives occurs after a noun when it is set off by commas. Ex. The book, well-written and suspenseful, kept my interest.

24 This completes the review of adjectives.
Additional review can be done in the review folders housed in 106 and the library.


Download ppt "Directions: Press F5 to begin the slide show"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google