Common adjectives

                            Common adjectives
  Adjective is a 'describing' word; the main syntactic role of which is to qualify a noun or noun phrase, giving more information about the object signified.[1]
Adjectives are one of the traditional eight English parts of speech, although linguists today distinguish adjectives from words such as determiners that formerly were considered to be adjectives. In this paragraph, "traditional" is an adjective, and in the preceding paragraph, "main" is.
An adjective is a kind of word (a part of speech) that modifies (describes) a noun. Nouns are words that name a place, a person, a thing, or an idea. An adjective is a word that gives more information about the noun that goes with it (accompanies).
As a rule, in English, the adjective comes before the noun it describes.
Exceptions
Sometimes an adjective is not followed by a noun:
  • The sky is blue.
  • The joke she told was so funny, I could not stop laughing all day.
  • He went crazy.
  •                                                  EXAMPLE
  • It´s a very easy exercise for kids.
  • They can stop the song to have time to write all the words. Thank you