30 pairs of English antonyms (verbs, nouns and adjectives) 7: By 30, I hope so, Verbs, nouns and adjectives, verbs, nouns and adjectives, verbs, nouns and adjectives

30 pairs of English antonyms (verbs, nouns and adjectives) 7: By 30, I hope so, Verbs, nouns and adjectives, verbs, nouns and adjectives, verbs, nouns and adjectives

Above below
After before
All all none
Answer ask
Answer question
Behind back front
Bad good
The best -- the worst
Better -- worse
Black white
Both -- neither
Busy -- free
Buy (in) - sell (out)
Cheap -- expensive, dear
Clean clean dirty
Cleverly stupid
Cold hot
Come and go
Cool cool warm
Danger safety
Dark -- bright, light
Day night
Die die live
Down up
Dry wet
Early late
Difficult, hard, difficult
Empty -- full
Entrance exit
Fall fall rise
Far near
Finish, end -- begin, start
The first -- the last
Foreign home
Forget -- remember
Sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad
Happy, happy, sad
Hard soft
To love or like; like
Here's here -- there's there
High low
Ill ill ill
Out of out of out of out of out of out of
Inside is inside outside is outside
Light heavy
Lose -- find found
Win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win win
Catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch catch
Most -- least, fewest
Move -- stop
Never never
Nothing nothing everything
Now -- then
Old old new
Old old young
Pain pleasure
Fail to pass
Poor rich
Pull pull push
Rain dry
Right left
Right right wrong
Safe -- dangerous
Same different
Short long
Short -- tall
Sleep wake up
Small -- big, large, great
Start -- reach
Strong weak
Take take bring
Take take give
Teach (lesson) - learn
Thin fat
Thin thin
Town country
The whole part
Wide wide narrow
With -- without
Yes no
Do adjectives have singular and plural?
Human is an adjective, and its plural is humans?
Human is an adjective, which means human. But at the same time, it is also a noun, which means human. It is equivalent to human being, so it has plural form
Plural of mouse and antonym of inside
mouse --mice
inside --outside
mice
outside
mice
outside
Mouse singular, mouse plural
Rat singular rat, plural rat
The opposite of inside is outside
What is the singular and plural of French adjectives? What is the difference between French adjectives and English adjectives?
French adjectives should be combined with French nouns. In a word, the Yin and Yang, singular and plural of adjectives are determined by the nouns they modify
Antonym of inside
Answer in English
outside
Country, capital, language, person [singular and plural], adjective [English]
Take our country as a template: People's Republic of China (PRC) capital Beijing Language Chinese people Chinese (single) Chinese (complex) adjective Chinese give you a few more familiar countries: United States of America (USA) Washington, English, America
How to write the antonym of inside in English
outside
When the adjectives rich and poor change nouns as subjects, do they use singular or plural predicates
Only the + adjective can be regarded as a general reference to a class of people
Therefore, since it refers to a class of people, of course, use the plural!
singular
Plural. A class of people represented by
The rich are not always happy
The rich refers to a group of people
Poor is the same
Fat (antonym)____ Difference (adjective)_____ Clean (antonym)____ Thin (comparative)_____ Big (comparative)____
You (possessive pronoun)
Do you want to use the plural for the attributives man and woman?
In English sentences, when adjectives are used as attributives to modify nouns, they usually use the singular form. Are the words man and woman exceptional? Should they use the singular or the plural?
There are two______ Doctors (there are two female doctors)
Should I fill in "woman" or "women" on the line?
In English, one noun can be used to modify another noun to explain its nature. It can be used as an adjective attribute. In this case, the noun used as an attribute should be singular
But if man or woman is used to modify the following plural nouns to indicate their gender, then both nouns must be plural
To change,
There are two women_ doctors
That's the rule
This is a man/woman doctor.
These are men/women doctors.
That's it. The example I gave should be very clear.
In English sentences, when adjectives are used as attributives to modify nouns, they are usually in the form of numbers. So man and woman are not the exception, they should be in the plural,
This is the focus of the exam
highlights