B1 · Intermédiaire Chapitre 37

Exprime-toi avec précision et fluidité

5 Règles totales
25 exemples
1 min

Chapter in 30 Seconds

Elevate your descriptive language and conversational flow by mastering nuances in adjectives, adverbs, and tag questions.

  • Distinguish between internal feelings and external descriptions.
  • Use intensifiers to emphasize your opinions.
  • Integrate compound descriptors and question tags into natural conversation.
Add color and clarity to your everyday English.

Ce que tu vas apprendre

Prêt à donner du relief à tes conversations ? Ce chapitre est une étape clé pour arrêter de traduire mot à mot du français et enfin adopter le rythme naturel de l'anglais. On commence par un classique qui piège souvent les élèves : la différence entre les adjectifs en '-ed' et '-ing'. Tu sauras enfin si tu es 'bored' (tu t'ennuies) ou 'boring' (tu es ennuyeux) — une nuance de taille pour tes interactions sociales ! On va aussi muscler tes descriptions avec les intensifieurs 'so' et 'such' pour insister sur ce que tu ressens, et apprendre à construire des adjectifs composés comme 'a five-star hotel' sans jamais te tromper sur le pluriel. Le vrai secret pour avoir l'air d'un 'native' ? Les question tags comme 'don't you?' ou 'isn't it?'. Tu apprendras à les utiliser pour relancer une discussion ou vérifier une info avec subtilité, par exemple pour confirmer un rendez-vous. Enfin, on s'attaquera à la place exacte des adverbes dans la phrase pour que ton anglais soit plus fluide et élégant. À la fin de ce chapitre, tu pourras raconter tes expériences avec une précision chirurgicale et une assurance qui fera toute la différence lors de tes prochains voyages ou réunions !

Learning Objectives

By the end of this chapter, you will be able to:

  1. 1
    By the end you will be able to: Use -ed/-ing adjectives to correctly describe emotions and situations.
  2. 2
    By the end you will be able to: Construct natural-sounding tag questions to confirm information.

Conseils et astuces (4)

💡

The Person Test

If the subject is a person feeling something, use -ed.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: -Ed and -Ing Adjectives: Bored or Boring? Interested or Interesting?
💡

The Noun Test

If you see a noun, use 'such'. If you don't, use 'so'.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: So, Such, Such a, So Much, So Many: Intensifiers
💡

The Hyphen Rule

Always use a hyphen when the adjective comes before the noun. It's the visual signal that the words are linked.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Compound Adjectives with Numbers: A Two-Day Trip, A Five-Star Hotel
💡

Listen for the intonation

If the voice goes down, it's a statement. If it goes up, it's a question.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Question Tags: Aren't You? Don't You? Isn't It?

Vocabulaire clé (5)

bored feeling weary boring causing weariness intensifier word that adds force hyphen the '-' symbol frequency how often

Real-World Preview

plane

Planning a Vacation

Review Summary

  • -ed = feeling; -ing = source
  • So + adj; Such + (a/an) + noun
  • Number + hyphen + singular noun
  • Statement, + auxiliary + pronoun?
  • Subject + adverb + verb

Erreurs courantes

Saying 'I am boring' means you are a dull person. Use 'bored' to describe your feeling.

Wrong: I am boring.
Correct: I am bored.

Compound adjectives with numbers must use the singular form of the noun.

Wrong: A two-days trip.
Correct: A two-day trip.

Tag questions require the auxiliary verb (do/does/is/are) to match the main verb tense.

Wrong: You like it, like you?
Correct: You like it, don't you?

Next Steps

You have done a fantastic job today. Keep practicing these structures and you will sound native in no time!

Write a diary entry using 3 tag questions.

Pratique rapide (10)

Fill in the blank with the correct form.

It was a ___ (three-day) trip.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: three-day
Hyphenated and singular.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Compound Adjectives with Numbers: A Two-Day Trip, A Five-Star Hotel

Fill in the blank.

The news was ___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: surprising
The news causes surprise.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: -Ed and -Ing Adjectives: Bored or Boring? Interested or Interesting?

Fix the error.

Find and fix the mistake:

I have a ten-minutes break.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: I have a ten-minute break
Singular noun.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Compound Adjectives with Numbers: A Two-Day Trip, A Five-Star Hotel

Choose the correct option.

He is ___ tall.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: so
Adjective alone needs 'so'.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: So, Such, Such a, So Much, So Many: Intensifiers

Choose the correct sentence.

Which is correct?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: A five-star hotel
Hyphenated and singular.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Compound Adjectives with Numbers: A Two-Day Trip, A Five-Star Hotel

Find the error.

Find and fix the mistake:

She is happy always.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: She is always happy
Adverbs go after 'to be'.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Position of Adverbs and Adverb Phrases

Find the mistake.

Find and fix the mistake:

They went home, went they?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: They went home, didn't they?
Simple past needs 'did'.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Question Tags: Aren't You? Don't You? Isn't It?

Fill in the blank.

I ___ eat lunch at noon.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: always eat
Frequency adverbs go before the main verb.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Position of Adverbs and Adverb Phrases

Choose the correct word.

I was ___ by the results.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: disappointed
You are the recipient of the feeling.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: -Ed and -Ing Adjectives: Bored or Boring? Interested or Interesting?

Choose the correct word.

The lecture was very ___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: interesting
The lecture causes interest.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: -Ed and -Ing Adjectives: Bored or Boring? Interested or Interesting?

Score: /10

Questions fréquentes (6)

No, things don't have feelings. Use -ing.
Yes, but it means the person causes the feeling (e.g., 'He is boring').
No, 'so' is for adjectives/adverbs. Use 'such' for nouns.
Because 'such' acts as a determiner, and singular countable nouns need an article.
Because it is an adjective. Adjectives in English do not have plural forms.
Yes, when it is used as an adjective before a noun.