This document provides instructions and examples for using comparative adjectives in English. It includes exercises where students are asked to:
1. Write comparative forms of adjectives to compare pictures and concepts.
2. Complete sentences using comparative adjectives to compare qualities like size, age, interest level, and taste between different nouns.
3. Write opposites of adjectives using comparative forms.
4. Complete additional sentences comparing the adjectives of two nouns, such as cars, houses, brothers' heights, and amounts of work.
The document aims to teach English language learners how to properly form and use comparative adjectives in sentences.
Descripción original:
It is a worksheet that is based on Comparative adjectives.
This document provides instructions and examples for using comparative adjectives in English. It includes exercises where students are asked to:
1. Write comparative forms of adjectives to compare pictures and concepts.
2. Complete sentences using comparative adjectives to compare qualities like size, age, interest level, and taste between different nouns.
3. Write opposites of adjectives using comparative forms.
4. Complete additional sentences comparing the adjectives of two nouns, such as cars, houses, brothers' heights, and amounts of work.
The document aims to teach English language learners how to properly form and use comparative adjectives in sentences.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Formatos disponibles
Descargue como DOC, PDF, TXT o lea en línea desde Scribd
This document provides instructions and examples for using comparative adjectives in English. It includes exercises where students are asked to:
1. Write comparative forms of adjectives to compare pictures and concepts.
2. Complete sentences using comparative adjectives to compare qualities like size, age, interest level, and taste between different nouns.
3. Write opposites of adjectives using comparative forms.
4. Complete additional sentences comparing the adjectives of two nouns, such as cars, houses, brothers' heights, and amounts of work.
The document aims to teach English language learners how to properly form and use comparative adjectives in sentences.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Formatos disponibles
Descargue como DOC, PDF, TXT o lea en línea desde Scribd
Sue’s car isn’t very big. She wants _________________________________ car. 2. This house isn’t very modern. I prefer ______________________________ houses. 3. You’re not very tall. Your brother is ______________________________________. 4. Bill doesn’t work very hard. I work ______________________________________. 5. My chair isn’t very comfortable. Yours is ___________________________________. 6. Ann’s idea is not very good. My idea is _________________________________. 7. These flowers aren’t very pretty. The blue ones are _________________________. 8. My book isn’t very heavy. Your book is ______________________________. 9. I’m not very interested in art. I’m ________________________________ in history. 10. It isn’t very warm today. It was _____________________________ yesterday. 11. These tomatoes don’t taste very good. The other ones tasted ________________ 12. A bear isn’t very big. An elephant is ________________________________. 13. This city isn’t very beautiful. Paris is ____________________________________. 14. This knife isn’t very sharp. Do you have a __________________________ one? 15. People today aren’t very polite. In the past they were ______________________
V. Complete the sentences using comparative adjectives:
1. Carla’s house is _________________________ than Patty’s. (big)
2. Samuel isn’t very tall. Frank is ________________________. 3. El Porvenir is __________________(dangerous) than El Golf. 4. Billy works hard but Peter works _______________________. 5. Mall aventura Plaza is_____________ than Real Plaza. (good)