A1 · Débutant Chapitre 9

Adjectives and Descriptive Language

4 Règles totales
40 exemples
1 min

Chapter in 30 Seconds

Unlock the power of description to bring your Kannada sentences to life with vibrant detail.

  • Identify common Kannada adjectives.
  • Place descriptive words correctly before nouns.
  • Combine colors and sizes to paint pictures with words.
Paint your world with words.

Ce que tu vas apprendre

Expand your vocabulary with common adjectives. Learn how to place adjectives before nouns to describe the world.

Learning Objectives

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

  1. 1
    By the end you will be able to: Describe everyday objects using size and color adjectives.

Exemples clés (8)

2

Idu nanna hosa phone.

This is my new phone.

Place de l'adjectif en kannada : Décrire les noms (dodda mane)
3

Nanna kāru kempu.

My car is red.

Décrire les couleurs (Kempu, Nīli)
4

Adu hasiru baṇṇada bag.

That is a green colored bag.

Décrire les couleurs (Kempu, Nīli)
5

Nanage dodda coffee bēku.

I want a big coffee.

Décrire les tailles en kannada (dodda, sanna)
6

Adu tumba udda queue.

That is a very long queue.

Décrire les tailles en kannada (dodda, sanna)
7

Nanage `hosa` phone beku.

I want a new phone.

Adjectifs en kannada : Accord facile (dodda, hosa)
8

Avanu `olleyu` huduga.

He is a good boy.

Adjectifs en kannada : Accord facile (dodda, hosa)

Conseils et astuces (4)

💡

The 'English' Rule

If you are confused, just remember English. We say 'Green Apple', not 'Apple Green'. Kannada follows the exact same logic.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Place de l'adjectif en kannada : Décrire les noms (dodda mane)
💡

The 'Baṇṇa' Shortcut

If you forget the specific adjective form, you can always say '[Color Name] baṇṇada' (e.g., kempu baṇṇada). It means 'of red color' and works for everything!
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Décrire les couleurs (Kempu, Nīli)
🎯

The 'Elder' Nuance

Remember that dodda and chikka are also used for family relations. Dodda-ppa is your father's elder brother, and Chikka-ppa is his younger brother.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Décrire les tailles en kannada (dodda, sanna)
💡

The 'No Change' Rule

Always remember that Kannada adjectives are like English ones—they don't change based on who you're talking about. It's 'dodda' for everyone!
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Adjectifs en kannada : Accord facile (dodda, hosa)

Vocabulaire clé (6)

dodda big sanna small kempu red nīli blue hosa new mane house

Real-World Preview

shopping-bag

Buying a Shirt

Review Summary

  • Adjective + Noun
  • Adj + Noun + ide

Erreurs courantes

In Kannada, the adjective must come before the noun, not after.

Wrong: Mane dodda
Correct: Dodda mane

Adjectives do not take plural suffixes; only the noun does.

Wrong: Dodda-galu mane
Correct: Dodda mane-galu

Do not add linking particles between the adjective and the noun.

Wrong: Kempu-a shart
Correct: Kempu shart

Next Steps

You are doing great! Keep practicing these descriptions, and you will be speaking fluently in no time.

Label your furniture with sticky notes using Kannada adjectives.

Pratique rapide (8)

Choose the correct adjective for 'New Car'.

___ car.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: hosa
In Kannada, the base adjective 'hosa' is used before the noun without any changes.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Adjectifs en kannada : Accord facile (dodda, hosa)

Fill in the blank with the correct adjective placement.

I have a _____ (new) car.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: hosa car
In Kannada, the adjective 'hosa' (new) must come before the noun 'car'.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Place de l'adjectif en kannada : Décrire les noms (dodda mane)

Choose the correct word for 'Big house'.

____ mane.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: dodda
We use the base form 'dodda' when it directly precedes the noun 'mane'.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Décrire les tailles en kannada (dodda, sanna)

Fix the word order for 'Long queue'.

Find and fix the mistake:

Queue udda.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Udda queue.
In Kannada, the adjective (udda) must come before the noun (queue).

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Décrire les tailles en kannada (dodda, sanna)

Find the mistake in this sentence: 'Nanna car kempugaḷu.'

Find and fix the mistake:

Nanna car kempugaḷu.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nanna car kempu.
Adjectives in Kannada do not take plural suffixes like 'gaḷu'. 'Kempu' is enough.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Décrire les couleurs (Kempu, Nīli)

Fill in the blank with the correct word for 'Green'.

The leaf is ____. (ಎಲೆ ____ ಇದೆ.)

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Hasiru
'Hasiru' is the Kannada word for Green.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Décrire les couleurs (Kempu, Nīli)

Find and fix the mistake in this sentence.

Find and fix the mistake:

Nannadu mane dodda.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nannadu dodda mane.
Adjectives like 'dodda' (big) belong before the noun 'mane' (house).

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Place de l'adjectif en kannada : Décrire les noms (dodda mane)

Fix the adjective agreement mistake.

Find and fix the mistake:

Doddagaḷu manegaḷu.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Dodda manegaḷu.
Adjectives like 'dodda' do not take plural suffixes even if the noun is plural.

frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Adjectifs en kannada : Accord facile (dodda, hosa)

Score: /8

Questions fréquentes (6)

No, in the attributive position (before the noun), the adjective remains the same regardless of gender. For example, olleya works for both huduga (boy) and hudugi (girl).
The word for 'very' is tumba. It goes right before the adjective, like tumba dodda mane (a very big house).
No, Kannada color adjectives are invariant. Whether it's one red car or a hundred, it’s always 'kempu'.
'Kāru kempu ide' (The car is red) vs 'Kempu kāru' (The red car). Very straightforward!
No, it stays exactly the same. For example, 'dodda mane' (big house) and 'dodda manegaḷu' (big houses) both use the same form of the adjective.
Yes, you can say 'udda cinema' if you feel the movie is dragging on too long. It's very common in casual speech.