There's way too many to count
there are too many adjectives in French to give it a try. That wouldn't be much use anyway: with just a few hundred words (not only adjectives), you will be perfectly undertood by French speakers.
The general order of adjectives in English is opinion, size, age, shape, color, origin, material, purpose. For example, "beautiful large old round red French silk wedding dress."
Adjectives in French are words that describe or modify nouns by giving more information about their characteristics, such as size, color, or quantity. Adjectives usually agree in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) with the noun they describe.
No, "bangs" and "bags" are not the same thing in French adjectives. "Bangs" is translated as "frange" and refers to a type of hairstyle where the hair is cut across the forehead. "Bags" could refer to "sacs" or "poches" which means bags or pockets.
French nouns and adjectives have gender because the language has evolved with Latin roots, which also had gender distinctions. Gender in French is not always based on biological sex but rather on linguistic conventions. It serves to indicate agreement between nouns, adjectives, and articles in a sentence.
there are too many adjectives in French to give it a try. That wouldn't be much use anyway: with just a few hundred words (not only adjectives), you will be perfectly undertood by French speakers.
No, "bangs" and "bags" are not the same thing in French adjectives. "Bangs" is translated as "frange" and refers to a type of hairstyle where the hair is cut across the forehead. "Bags" could refer to "sacs" or "poches" which means bags or pockets.
The general order of adjectives in English is opinion, size, age, shape, color, origin, material, purpose. For example, "beautiful large old round red French silk wedding dress."
There are a great many French adjectives that begin with the letter B. Belle is one French adjective that means beautiful.
les adjectifs
who...where...what
mechant
RareRougeRévolutionnaireRadinRabougri
illettré
Adjectives in French are words that describe or modify nouns by giving more information about their characteristics, such as size, color, or quantity. Adjectives usually agree in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) with the noun they describe.
No. In French, adjectives follow the noun. But in English, "attribute" adjectives precede the noun in all cases (predicate adjectives follow verbs like "is"). Try reversing the noun and adjective in "The red box is on the table". "The box red is on the table" sounds like there's a type of "boxy" red, and this color sample is on the table, or vaguely French.
French nouns and adjectives have gender because the language has evolved with Latin roots, which also had gender distinctions. Gender in French is not always based on biological sex but rather on linguistic conventions. It serves to indicate agreement between nouns, adjectives, and articles in a sentence.