You are watching English lessons.
Maybe you're watching English lessons on www.engvid.com or maybe you're watching it on YouTube.
If you go to www.engvid.com, you can have a quiz following this lesson.
So it's always a good thing to do.
Today this lesson is for, I can't say the name, Qasim, right here, Qasim Ahmadli.
I'm sorry if I said your name wrong.
I need some pronunciation lessons, but not in English.
I'll teach you the English, you teach me how to say your name.
Anyways, this lesson is for you and everyone else out there listening and watching.
A very, very easy, basic, very important lesson in English grammar, grammar, don't be scared.
Qasim wanted to know the differences between adjectives and adverbs, okay?
I remember when I was learning this in school, I was confused as well.
And the way that I remember this, one of my teachers taught me a very easy way to figure
This word contains the word "verbs."
So you can always remember that an adverb describes a verb.
Cool.
A verb is an action word most of the time.
Now, there are verbs that are not really action words called "stative verbs," but do not worry
What we're going to look at are just simple, basic action words or action verbs.
Does anyone know in this sentence where my verb is?
She is my subject, "ran" is my verb.
It tells you how the person did the action, or it describes the verb.
So you can ask yourself, "Hmm, how did she run?"
Cool.
Can you tell me where the adverb is in this sentence?
Oh, slowly, yes, "slowly" in this sentence is the adverb.
So, this tells me how the subject does the action.
So if you can remember this, adverb describes a verb, or the adverb describes how the action
is done, you're gonna be a lot better off in English grammar.
So once you've got this down, you can think of maybe the opposite if you want, which is
An adjective, there's no verb, an adjective describes a noun.
So then you're thinking, "Oh no, how do I remember what a noun is?"
A noun is three things, a person, a place, or a thing.
This is how I remembered it from when I was a child.
I always say a noun is a person, a place, or a thing.
So an adjective describes a noun.
So let's look at this sentence.
Can anyone tell me in this sentence where is my noun?
No.
No.
So in this sentence, my dog is my noun.
These words big and black describe my noun.
The other thing you have to keep in mind in English is when you're describing something,
we always go shape and then color.
Most languages, I know Japanese, Korean, and Spanish, you guys would say black big dog.
But in English, just to make it more difficult, we change it and we say big black dog.
In this one, we have a little yellow cat.
Can you tell me where the noun is in this sentence?
Meow.
Meow.
Cat.
Tell me what the cat looks like.
The cat is little and it's yellow.
So again, in English, we always go size and then the color and then the actual noun.
The other thing that's very important is where in the sentence you actually put the adverb
The adjectives always come before the noun.
So maybe you can remember first is the adjective, then it's the noun.
After that, there's the adverb.
The adverb comes before, sorry, after the verb.
So if you can remember what it looks like and how the verb happened, you're on your
way to learning the differences in the terrible world of fascinatingly wonderful, terrible,