The Most Common Adjectives and Adverbs Mistake – CSET Practice Test On Adjectives
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4. Someone brave saved her father’s life.
The adjectival phrases are: “brave”, and “her father’s”.
The as — as construction is used to create a comparison expressing equality:
Examples:
1. He is as foolish as he is large.
The adjectival phrase is: “as foolish as”.
2. She is as bright as her mother.
The adjectival phrase is: “as bright as”.
Watch the famous School Rock video below to review adjectives in greater detail. A CSET practice test on adjectives follows below with an answer key at the end of this article.
Transcription of School Rock video Unpack Your Adjectives
Music & Lyrics: George R. Newall
Sung by: Blossom Dearie
Animation: Phil Kimmelman and Associates
Got home from camping last spring.
Saw people, places and things.
We barely had arrived,
Friends asked us to describe
The people, places and every last thing.
So we unpacked our adjectives.
I unpacked "frustrating" first.
Reached in and found the word "worst".
Then I picked "soggy" and
Next I picked "foggy" and
Then I was ready to tell them my tale.
'Cause I'd unpacked my adjectives.
Adjectives are words you use to really describe things,
Handy words to carry around.
Days are sunny or they're rainy
Boys are dumb or else they're brainy
Adjectives can show you which way.
Adjectives are often used to help us compare things,
To say how thin, how fat, how short, how tall.
Girls who are tall can get taller,
Boys who are small can get smaller,
Till one is the tallest
And the other's the smallest of all.
We hiked along without care.
Then we ran into a bear.
He was a hairy bear,
He was a scary bear,
We beat a hasty retreat from his lair.
And described him with adjectives.
>> (Whoah! Boy, that was one big, ugly bear!)
(You can even make adjectives out of the other parts of
speech, like verbs or nouns. All you have to do is tack on
an ending, like "ic" or "ish" or "ary". For example, this
boy can grow up to be a huge man, but still have a boyish
face. "Boy" is a noun, but the ending "ish" makes it an
adjective. "Boyish": that describes the huge man's face.
Get it?)
Next time you go on a trip,
Remember this little tip:
The minute you get back,
They'll ask you this and that,
You can describe people, places and things...
Simply unpack your adjectives.
You can do it with adjectives.
Tell them 'bout it with adjectives.
You can shout it with adjectives.CSET Practice Test
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