Adjectives & Word Order
Describe nouns with adjectives — placed before the noun or after “to be” — and learn why English adjectives never change. Beginner grammar with 20 questions.
An adjective describes a noun — it tells us what something is like: a big house, a happy student, an interesting book. In English, where you put the adjective matters, and it follows a clear rule.
The golden rule: adjective BEFORE the noun
When an adjective and a noun are together, the adjective comes first.
| Wrong order | Correct order |
|---|---|
| a house big | a big house |
| a student clever | a clever student |
| a book interesting | an interesting book |
Adjectives after the verb “to be”
Adjectives can also come after the verb to be (am/is/are). Here there is no noun directly after.
- The house is big.
- Aisha is clever.
- The book is interesting.
Adjectives never change
Good news: English adjectives have one form. They do not change for singular/plural or male/female.
- a tall boy / a tall girl / tall buildings
- NOT talls buildings
Order of two adjectives
Sometimes we use more than one adjective. A common order is opinion before fact (like size or colour).
- a beautiful old house (opinion + age)
- a nice big garden (opinion + size)
- a small black bag (size + colour)
- a car red → a red car
- She is a girl tall. → She is a tall girl.
- two olds books → two old books
Practise adjectives and word order with the 20 questions below.
Check your understanding
Answer the questions below. You will see instantly if you are right.
Want feedback from a real tutor on your reading, writing and speaking?
Book a Free Consultation