1. ADJECTIVE adalah suatu kata yang menerangkan
noun (kata benda) atau pronoun (kata ganti).
a. Noun (kata benda)
- The class is good
= kelas itu bagus (good
menerangkan clausa)
- My books are thick
= buku saya tebal (thick menerangkan book)
- This is big building
= ini adalah sebuah
gedung yang besar (big
menerangkan building)
menerangkan building)
b. Pronoun (kata ganti)
- he is clever
= ia pandai
(clever menerangkan he)
- she is beatiful
= ia cantik (beautiful
menerangkan she)
- they are diligent
= mereka rajin (diligent
menerangkan they)
2. ADVERB adalah suatu kata yang
menerangkan verb ,adjective, adverb yang lain atau seluruh kalimat.
a. verb (kata kerja)
- he is working
hard = ia bekerja keras (hard menerangkan working)
- the train run quickly = kereta api
cepat larinya (quickly menerangkan runs)
- she spaks loudly
= ia berbicara keras (loudly menerangkan
speaks)
The Difference between Adjectives and Adverbs
The Basic Rules: Adjectives
Adjectives modify nouns. To modify means to change
in some way. By modifying, adjectives give more detail about the noun. For
example:
1. "I ate a
meal." Meal is a noun. The reader does not know what kind of meal this is,
leaving a lot of room open for interpretation.
2. "I ate an
enormous meal." Meal is a noun, and enormous is an adjective that modifies
it. It tells us what kind of meal the person ate. By using adjectives, the
writer gives the reader a better understanding of the noun.
Adjectives clarify the noun by answering one of the
following different questions: "What kind?" or "Which?" or
"How many?" For example:
1. "The tall
girl is riding her bike." Tall tells the reader which girl the writer is
talking about.
2. “Our old
van needs to be replaced soon.” Old tells the reader what kind of van the
writer is describing.
3. "The
tough professor gave us the final exam." Tough tells the reader what kind
of professor we're talking about. Final tells the reader which exam.
4. "Fifteen
students passed the midterm exam; twelve students passed the final exam."
Fifteen and twelve both tell the reader how many students; midterm and final
both tell the reader which exam.
So, generally speaking, adjectives answer the
following questions:
Which?
What kind of?
How many?
Some Other Rules for Adjectives
Most of the time, adjectives come before nouns.
However, some adjectives actually come after the nouns they modify. These
adjectives will most often follow a verb from this list:
ü be
ü feel
ü taste
ü smell
ü sound
ü look
ü appear
Seem
Some examples:
1. "The dog
is black." Black is an adjective that modifies the noun dog, but it
comes after the verb is. (Remember that "is" is a form of the verb
"be.") What kind of dog is it? A black dog.
2. "Brian
seems sad." Sad describes the noun, Brian, not the verb, seems. Sad
answers the question “which way does Brian seem?”
3. "The milk
smells rotten." What kind of smell does the milk have? A rotten one.
4. "The
speaker sounds hoarse." Hoarse answers the question “which way does
the speaker sound?”
5. “The ice-cream
looks melted.” Here, melted does not describe the verb looks. It describes
the noun ice cream. What kind of ice cream does it look like? Melted ice
cream.
6. “Alex feels
sleepy.” What kind of way does Alex feel? Sleepy.
The Basic Rules: Adverbs
Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.
(You can recognize adverbs easily because many of them are formed by adding -ly
to an adjective, though that is not always the case.) The most common question
that adverbs answer is how.
Let's look at verbs first.
1. "She
sang beautifully." Beautifully is an adverb that modifies sang. It
tells the reader how she sang.
2. "The
cellist played carelessly." Carelessly is an adverb that modifies played.
It tells the reader how the cellist played.
Adverbs also modify adjectives and other adverbs.
3. "That
woman is extremely nice." Nice is an adjective that modifies the noun
woman. Extremely is an adverb that modifies nice; it tells the reader how nice
she is. How nice is she? She's extremely nice.
4. "It was a
terribly hot afternoon." Hot is an adjective that modifies the noun
afternoon. Terribly is an adverb that modifies the adjective hot. How hot is
it? Terribly hot.
Adverbs answer the question how. They can also
answer the questions when, where, and why.
1. “She arrived
late.” Late describes when she arrived.
2. “They
all went there for the party.” There is where they all went to the party.
3. “The swim team
practices every morning to develop good habits.” To develop good habits acts as
an adverbial infinitive phrase that explains why the swim team practices every
morning. Answering the question why usually requires an infinitive phrase.
SUMBER:
http://andrianisyafa.blogspot.co.id/2011/02/perbedaan-antara-adjective-dan-adverb.html
http://belajarbahasainggrisyangasikk.blogspot.co.id/2013/08/contoh-pengunaan-adjective-dan-adverb.html
Riska Nurmala Sari
3EB15
27213798
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar