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Exercise 37. Make adverbs from these adjectives.


Date: 2015-10-07; view: 630.


EMPHASISING

AND VOCABULARY

WORD-BUILDING

GIVING OPINIONS

You like? Which ones can you use to describe something you dislike?

Exercise 36. Look at the adjectives. Which ones can you use to describe something

Musical love story

Action film western thriller science fiction film horror film comedy

Each type.

Exercise 35. Look at these words for types of films. Think of an example of a film for

AND SPEAKING

VOCABULARY

Ex.: action film: “Robocop”

amazing appalling simple remarkable delightful charming impressive awkward far-fetched clumsy sensitive gripping horrible funny powerful terrible emotional fantastic slow extraordinary spectacular

 

 

You can use the following common phrases to give opinions:

 

I thought it was really good.

I found it uninteresting.

I've never seen such a good film.

It's well worth / not worth seeing.

As far as I'm concerned, it's the best film I've ever seen.

In my opinion …

If you ask me …

Personally I think …

I guess …

I believe …

I reckon …

 

 

You can also use the following adverbs of degree before an adjective to emphasise something:

absolutely amazingly extremely especially extraordinarily particularly really

Ex.: It's a really exciting film.

 

simple brilliant remarkable delightful charming impressive powerful happy spectacular


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