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    Learn English > English lessons and exercises > English test #108115: Forming adjectives from nouns
    > Other English exercises on the same topics: Adjectives | Making portraits, describing | How words are built | Find the word [Change theme]
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    Forming adjectives from nouns


    Forming adjectives from nouns:  in English lots of adjectives are formed by adding “Y” to a noun. Sometimes the adjective has a different meaning from that of the noun as it takes on a figurative connotation.  

    Here  are a few of them.

    Oily (from oil) 

    Greasy ( figurative)  smooth, unctuous 

    Gritty (from grit):  (figurative) rough,  tough

    Graggy   ( fromcrag) : hilly;  ( figurative) rough  , full of wrinkles 

    Crabby  ( from crab) :   irritable ,ill-tempered   

    Snacky    (from snack):   something  fit to be eaten between main meals

    Zesty ( from zest): full of  energy, dynamic

    Fishy (from fish): smelling like fish,(figurative) suspicious, dubious

    Saucy (from sauce) : covered with sauce; (figurative)  impertinent, sexually attractive 

    Racy   (from  race): ( figurative )  not really proper, a bit  too  lively.

    Pacy (from pace, step): progressing or moving quickly 

    Jumpy  (from jump): (figurative)   edgy, nervous 

    Pushy  (from push) :  ( figurative )  aggressive ,forward

     





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    English exercise "Forming adjectives from nouns" created by carlabice47 with The test builder. [More lessons & exercises from carlabice47]
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    1. I'm so used to eating things that I am not able to sit for a proper meal any more.

    2. The old fisherman had a wrinkled, sunburnt, face.

    3. “A View from the Bridge” by A. Miller is a play about immigrants to the States.

    4. Comedies by Molière are full of servants who mock their masters.

    5. Sheila does not show her real age: she's so lively, and energetic !

    6. 'Lady Chatterley's Lover' by Lawrence was considered too a novel for the times and stirred great scandal.

    7. I really like psychological thrillers that take your breath away till the final denouement.

    8. I can't stand salesmen who try to force you to buy their articles.

    9. Before the job interview, David was very : he had clammy hands and was sweating profusely.

    10. I can't get myself to like Basil: there's something about him.

    11. He was an unpleasant guy .Nobody could stand his manners.

    12. She had become a ill-tempered woman who hated the male genre.










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