Master Adjectives for SSC
Adjectives are the "makeup" of English Grammar. They decorate Nouns and Pronouns. SSC loves to test you on confusing pairs (Few vs. Little), Double Comparatives, and the deadly "IOR" trap. Let's master everything from basic to advanced.
Introduction: What is an Adjective?
ЁЯФК Listen: Basics & The Pronoun Trap
Definition: An adjective is a word that modifies, describes, or adds information to a Noun or Pronoun. Think of a noun as a blank sketch, and an adjective as the colors you paint it with.
Role: It answers questions like "Which one?", "What kind?", "How many?", or "How much?".
рдкрд░рд┐рднрд╛рд╖рд╛: рд╡рд┐рд╢реЗрд╖рдг (Adjective) рд╡рд╣ рд╢рдмреНрдж рд╣реИ рдЬреЛ рдХрд┐рд╕реА Noun рдпрд╛ Pronoun рдХреА рд╡рд┐рд╢реЗрд╖рддрд╛ рдмрддрд╛рддрд╛ рд╣реИ рдпрд╛ рдЙрд╕рдХреЗ рдмрд╛рд░реЗ рдореЗрдВ рдЕрддрд┐рд░рд┐рдХреНрдд рдЬрд╛рдирдХрд╛рд░реА рджреЗрддрд╛ рд╣реИред
How Adjectives Change a Sentence
He bought a car.
(We don't know anything about the car)
He bought a fast, red car.
(Answers "What kind?" - Gives quality)
He bought two cars.
(Answers "How many?" - Gives number)
The 6 Core Types of Adjectives
SSC exams test your ability to recognize different types of adjectives because each type follows different grammar rules (especially for counting).
1. Adjectives of Quality (Descriptive)
Shows the kind, condition, or quality of a person or thing. Answers the question "Of what kind?"
- A brave soldier fought the war.
- She lives in a beautiful city.
- It was a heavy box.
2. Adjectives of Quantity
Shows how much of a thing is meant. Used strictly for Uncountable Nouns (water, time, patience).
- I ate some rice.
- He showed much patience.
- There is little milk left in the jug.
3. Adjectives of Number
Shows how many persons or things are meant. Used strictly for Plural Countable Nouns (boys, books, cars).
- Five boys are playing.
- There are many books on the table.
- Several mistakes were found.
4. Demonstrative Adjectives
Used to point out which specific person or thing is meant. Answers the question "Which one?"
- This pen is expensive.
- I don't like those apples.
- That car belongs to me.
5. Possessive Adjectives
Shows ownership or relationship over a noun.
- Where is my book?
- Your bag is on the table.
- They painted their house red.
6. Interrogative Adjectives
Used with nouns to ask questions. They must sit immediately before a noun.
- Whose car is this?
- Which way shall we go?
- What book are you reading?
ЁЯЪи SSC Trap: Pronoun vs. Adjective (The Neighbor Test)
In English, the same word (like This, That, Which, Some, Many, Each) can act as a Pronoun in one sentence, and an Adjective in another. SSC uses this to trick you in "Parts of Speech" identification questions.
The Golden Rule (The Neighbor Test):
An Adjective almost ALWAYS sits immediately NEXT TO a Noun to describe it. If the word stands completely alone (acts as the main subject/object), it is a Pronoun!
This is my book.
('This' is alone. It is the subject of the verb 'is'.)
This book is mine.
('This' sits right next to the noun 'book'.)
Which is your pen?
('Which' stands alone to ask the question.)
Which pen is yours?
('Which' sits right next to the noun 'pen'.)
Many are called, but few are chosen.
('Many' stands alone as the subject representing people.)
Many men were called.
('Many' describes the noun 'men'.)
Degrees of Comparison & Master Traps
ЁЯФК Listen: The "IOR", "Any Other" & Parallel Traps
Foundations: What are Degrees of Comparison?
Adjectives change their form to show the level or intensity of the quality they are describing. There are three levels, called "Degrees". Knowing when to use which degree is the secret to solving 50% of SSC Adjective errors.
- 1. Positive Degree: Used when talking about ONLY ONE person or thing. No comparison is being made. (e.g., Ram is a tall boy.)
- 2. Comparative Degree: Used when comparing exactly TWO persons or things. It is usually followed by "than". (e.g., Ram is taller than Shyam.)
- 3. Superlative Degree: Used when comparing THREE OR MORE persons or things. It shows the highest level and always takes the article "the" before it. (e.g., Ram is the tallest boy in the class.)
| Positive (1 Thing) | Comparative (2 Things) | Superlative (3+ Things) | Rule for Formation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smart Tall |
Smarter Taller |
Smartest Tallest |
Short words: add -er / -est |
| Beautiful Intelligent |
More beautiful More intelligent |
Most beautiful Most intelligent |
Long words: use more / most |
| Good / Well Bad / Ill Little |
Better Worse Less |
Best Worst Least |
Irregular: Must be memorized! |
The Logic: You cannot apply two comparative rules to the same word. If a word already ends in "-er" (like smarter), it is already comparative! Adding "more" in front of it is like saying "more more smart". It is a strict redundancy error.
(Drop 'more')
(Drop 'most')
('Better' is already the comparative of Good)
ЁЯЪи SSC Trap: The Latin "IOR" Words
Normally, comparative degrees are followed by the conjunction "than". However, English borrowed some comparative words from Latin. Because they are foreign words, they refuse to follow English rules. These 7 specific Latin adjectives ending in -IOR are ALWAYS followed by the preposition "to", never "than".
Memorize the 7 "IOR" Words:
Senior, Junior, Superior, Inferior, Prior, Anterior, Posterior. (Also include: Prefer, Preferable).
The Logic: When comparing a person or thing with the rest of its OWN group using a Comparative Degree, you must use the word "OTHER" to exclude the subject from the group. If you don't use 'other', you are logically comparing the person to himself!
ЁЯза The "Diamond vs. Metal" Hack
If the comparison is inside the group тЮФ Use "any other".
If the comparison is outside the group тЮФ Do not use "other".
тЭМ Ram is smarter than any boy in his class.
(Since Ram is a boy in the class, this means Ram is smarter than Ram. Impossible!)
тЬЕ Ram is smarter than any other boy in his class.
(Excludes Ram from the rest of the boys).
тЭМ Diamond is harder than any other metal.
(Diamond is NOT a metal! It is a non-metal. You cannot exclude it from a group it doesn't belong to.)
тЬЕ Diamond is harder than any metal.
(Correct. No 'other' needed.)
The Logic: Normally, the article "The" is only used before Superlative degrees (The tallest). However, there is one massive exception! When two things increase or decrease together proportionally, we MUST use "The" before Comparative degrees.
Structure: The + Comparative Degree ... , The + Comparative Degree ...
(Never mix comparative and superlative here. Both must be comparative.)
(Missing 'the' in the second half is a common SSC error.)
Verbs of Sensation (VVIP SSC Trap)
ЁЯФК Listen: The "Math Formula" of Grammar
ЁЯза Teacher's Concept: The "Mirror" Hack
Normally, an Adverb (words ending in -ly) modifies an Action Verb. (e.g., He runs quickly. 'Quickly' describes the physical action of running).
However, Verbs of Sensation (Linking Verbs) do NOT show physical action. They act like a Mirror or an "Equal to" (=) sign. They simply connect the Subject to its description. Because they describe the Noun (the subject) looking into the mirror, they MUST be followed by an Adjective, not an Adverb!
ЁЯза Trick of the Examiners:
In SSC exams, examiners love to add "-ly" (Adverb) after sensation verbs to trick you. To never make a mistake again, look at these two formulas:
ACTION VERB: Subject тЮФ [Physical Action] тЮФ Adverb (-ly)
Example: He тЮФ runs тЮФ quickly. (Quickly describes the RUNNING)
SENSATION VERB: Subject [ = ] Adjective
Example: The soup [ = ] delicious. (Delicious describes the SOUP, not an action)
Because Sensation Verbs act as a Mirror or an Equals Sign (=) linking the Subject to its description, they MUST be followed by an Adjective, NEVER an Adverb!
Memorize the Copular / Sensation Verbs:
ЁЯСБя╕П The 5 Senses: Look, Sound, Smell, Feel, Taste.
ЁЯзШ State of Being: Be (is/am/are/was/were), Seem, Appear, Become, Turn, Get, Grow, Keep, Prove.
The SSC Mega Example Bank (Adverb vs Adjective)
тЭМ The soup tastes deliciously.
тЬЕ The soup tastes delicious.
(Soup = Delicious. No physical action).
тЭМ She looks beautifully today.
тЬЕ She looks beautiful today.
(She = Beautiful).
тЭМ I feel badly about the mistake.
тЬЕ I feel bad about the mistake.
(I = Bad. State of mind).
тЭМ Her voice sounds sweetly.
тЬЕ Her voice sounds sweet.
(Voice = Sweet).
тЭМ The roses smell sweetly.
тЬЕ The roses smell sweet.
(Roses = Sweet).
тЭМ The plan seems perfectly.
тЬЕ The plan seems perfect.
(Plan = Perfect).
тЭМ The sky grew darkly.
тЬЕ The sky grew dark.
(Sky = Dark. Here 'grew' means 'became').
ЁЯПЖ Top Ranker Secret: The "Dual Nature" Exception
Words like Look, Taste, Feel, Smell, Appear, and Grow can act as BOTH a Linking verb AND an Action verb depending entirely on the context of the sentence.
тАв Rule A (Condition): If the verb acts as an '=' sign describing the subject тЮФ Use an Adjective.
тАв Rule B (Action): If a living subject is actually performing a physical action (staring, sniffing, chewing, touching) тЮФ Use an Adverb (-ly).
The teacher looked angry.
(Teacher = Angry. Describes his state/face.)
The teacher looked angrily at the student.
(He performed the physical action of staring. Action = Adverb.)
The medicine tastes bitter.
(Medicine = Bitter. It has no mouth to taste anything!)
The chef tasted the soup cautiously.
(The chef used his mouth to physically sip. Action = Adverb.)
The meat smelled bad.
(Meat = Bad. It is emitting an odor.)
The police dog smelled the bag suspiciously.
(The dog physically sniffed the bag. Action = Adverb.)
The fabric feels soft.
(Fabric = soft. Describes its texture.)
The blind man felt his way carefully through the room.
(He physically touched the walls. Action = Adverb.)
He appeared sad after the meeting.
(He = Sad. Describes his mood.)
The magician appeared suddenly on the stage.
(Describes HOW he performed the action of popping up.)
He grew impatient.
(Grew means 'became'. He = Impatient.)
He grew the plants quickly.
(He performed the physical action of farming/cultivating.)
The Quantifier Masterclass
ЁЯФК Listen: Few vs Little & Much vs Many
ЁЯСитАНЁЯПл Teacher's Thought Process:
Before you fill in a blank with a quantifier, ask yourself: Can I count this noun 1, 2, 3?
- If YES (Books, Cars, Boys) тЮФ Use Many. (Answers "How Many?")
- If NO (Water, Patience, Money) тЮФ Use Much. (Answers "How Much?")
The "Some vs. Any" Rule:
- Some: Used in Positive sentences.
*Exception: Used in Questions IF it is a polite request/offer where we expect the answer to be "Yes" (e.g., Would you like some tea?). - Any: Used in Negative sentences and standard Questions.
тЭМ He showed many patience.
тЬЕ He showed much patience.
(You cannot count patience 1, 2, 3. Uncountable = Much.)
тЭМ I do not have some money.
тЬЕ I do not have any money.
(Negative sentence requires 'Any'.)
тЭМ Have you bought some apples?
тЬЕ Have you bought any apples?
(Standard question requires 'Any'.)
Just like Many/Much, FEW is used for Plural Countables, and LITTLE is used for Singular Uncountables.
The real SSC trap lies in the articles (A / The / None). Adding an article completely changes the emotion of the sentence!
ЁЯеЫ The "Glass Half Empty" Analogy
If you just say "Few" or "Little" (without 'A'), you are a pessimist. You are crying because the glass is almost empty (Negative).
If you say "A few" or "A little", you are an optimist. You are happy because there is at least *some* water in the glass (Positive).
| Article | Meaning / Emotion | Countable Example (Friends) | Uncountable Example (Hope) |
|---|---|---|---|
| No Article (Few / Little) |
Negative (Almost Zero). Not enough to do the job. | He has few friends. (He is lonely. Almost 0) |
There is little hope. (The patient might die. Almost 0) |
| "A" (A few / A little) |
Positive (Some). A small amount, but enough to do the job. | He has a few friends. (He has some friends to play with) |
There is a little hope. (The patient might survive!) |
| "The" (The few / The little) |
Specific. Not much, but ALL of what is there. | I lost the few friends I had. (Lost ALL of the small number) |
I drank the little water left. (Drank ALL the remaining water) |
Common SSC PYQ Traps
тЭМ I cannot make tea because there is a little milk in the jug.
тЬЕ I cannot make tea because there is little milk in the jug.
(Logic: If you cannot make tea, it means the milk is NOT enough. It is almost zero. You must use the negative word 'little' without 'A'.)
тЭМ Little knowledge is a dangerous thing.
тЬЕ A little knowledge is a dangerous thing.
(Logic: Zero knowledge is not dangerous. You must have 'some' positive amount of knowledge for it to be dangerous. So, use 'A little'.)
тЭМ I have read a few books that you gave me.
тЬЕ I have read the few books that you gave me.
(Logic: The phrase 'that you gave me' makes the books specific. I read ALL of the small number of books you gave. Use 'The few'.)
50 Confusing Adjective Pairs
SSC examiners know exactly how to play with your vocabulary. These pairs look similar or sound similar, but have completely different grammatical rules. Let's master the Top 10 in detail, followed by the Mega Bank.
Farther: Used for Physical Distance.
Further: Used for Additional / Next in a series.
Elder / Eldest: Used ONLY for persons of the same family (blood relation). Takes 'to' instead of 'than'.
Older / Oldest: Used for persons of different families, or for animals/things. Takes 'than'.
Later / Latest: Refers to Time. (Latest news).
Latter / Last: Refers to Position / Order. (The latter part of the movie).
(Meaning the second of two parts)
Less: Comparative of 'Little'. Used for Uncountable Nouns (Quantity).
Fewer: Comparative of 'Few'. Used for Countable Nouns (Number).
(Students are countable).
Nearest: Denotes physical distance.
Next: Denotes position or order in a sequence.
(Refers to sequence in the street).
Mutual: A reciprocal relationship strictly between TWO people.
Common: Shared by all; belonging to many.
(Shared by both of us. 'Mutual' is for reciprocal feelings, e.g., 'Mutual understanding').
Verbal: Relating to words (can be written or spoken).
Oral: Specifically spoken by mouth (NOT written).
(If it wasn't written, it was spoken by mouth).
Each: Used for two or more things, focusing on individuals separately. (Can act as Pronoun or Adjective).
Every: Used for more than two things, focusing on the group as a whole. (Can ONLY act as an Adjective).
(Cannot use 'Every' for exactly two).
Economic: Relating to the economy or finance.
Economical: Saving money; not wasteful (frugal).
(It saves fuel/money).
Childish: Immature, silly (Negative connotation).
Childlike: Innocent, pure (Positive connotation).
The Mega Bank: Pairs 11 to 50
Scroll through the remaining 40 critical pairs. Click the ЁЯФК icon to hear the pronunciation. Memorize the differences!
| Confusing Pair | Meaning & Difference | SSC Usage / Example |
|---|---|---|
| 11. Industrial Industrious |
Industrial: Relating to factories/industry. Industrious: Hardworking. |
He is an industrious student. (Not industrial) |
| 12. Amiable Amicable |
Amiable: Friendly, lovable (used for a person). Amicable: Friendly, peaceful (used for an agreement/situation). |
They reached an amicable settlement. |
| 13. Historic Historical |
Historic: Famous or important in history. Historical: Concerning past events. |
August 15 is a historic day. (Important day) |
| 14. Alternate Alternative |
Alternate: One after the other (every second one). Alternative: A choice between two or more things. |
Do you have any alternative plan? |
| 15. Continual Continuous |
Continual: Happening repeatedly with breaks. Continuous: Non-stop, without any break. |
The continuous rain flooded the city. |
| 16. Classic Classical |
Classic: Of the highest quality/standard. Classical: Relating to ancient Greek/Latin literature or traditional music. |
He loves listening to classical music. |
| 17. Comprehensive Comprehensible |
Comprehensive: Complete, including everything. Comprehensible: Able to be understood. |
The report is a comprehensive guide. |
| 18. Confident Confidential |
Confident: Sure, certain. Confidential: Secret, private. |
These documents are strictly confidential. |
| 19. Contemptible Contemptuous |
Contemptible: Deserving hatred/scorn. Contemptuous: Showing hatred/scorn. |
His behavior was contemptuous of the law. |
| 20. Credible Credulous |
Credible: Believable (e.g., a story). Credulous: Too ready to believe things; easily fooled (a person). |
He is so credulous that scammers target him. |
| 21. Defective Deficient |
Defective: Having a fault or flaw (e.g., a machine). Deficient: Lacking something necessary (e.g., vitamins). |
He is deficient in Vitamin D. |
| 22. Desirous Desirable |
Desirous: Having a desire/wanting something (followed by 'of'). Desirable: Worth having or doing. |
He is desirous of getting this job. |
| 23. Distinct Distinctive |
Distinct: Clear, noticeably different. Distinctive: A characteristic that sets something apart. |
The cheetah has a distinctive pattern. |
| 24. Elicit Illicit |
Elicit (Verb): To draw out a response. Illicit (Adjective): Illegal or forbidden. |
He was arrested for selling illicit liquor. |
| 25. Eminent Imminent |
Eminent: Famous and respected. Imminent: About to happen soon (usually a danger). |
The storm is imminent. |
| 26. Exceptional Exceptionable |
Exceptional: Unusually good; outstanding. Exceptionable: Open to objection; offensive. |
His rude comment was highly exceptionable. |
| 27. Fatal Fateful |
Fatal: Causing death. Fateful: Having a major (usually bad) impact on the future. |
It was a fatal accident. |
| 28. Graceful Gracious |
Graceful: Having beauty of movement/style. Gracious: Kind, polite, and generous. |
The host was very gracious to us. |
| 29. Human Humane |
Human: Relating to mankind. Humane: Showing compassion/kindness. |
We must treat animals in a humane way. |
| 30. Imaginary Imaginative |
Imaginary: Existing only in the imagination; not real. Imaginative: Creative; having a good imagination. |
The author is highly imaginative. |
| 31. Imperial Imperious |
Imperial: Relating to an empire/emperor. Imperious: Arrogant, bossy, domineering. |
He has an imperious attitude. |
| 32. Judicial Judicious |
Judicial: Relating to a judge or the law. Judicious: Wise, showing good judgment. |
He made a judicious decision. |
| 33. Literal Literary |
Literal: Exactly as written; word for word. Literary: Relating to literature/books. |
He won a literary award. |
| 34. Lovable Lovely |
Lovable: Deserving love; endearing. Lovely: Beautiful, highly pleasing. |
What a lovely dress! |
| 35. Momentary Momentous |
Momentary: Lasting for a very short time. Momentous: Very important; historic. |
Winning the World Cup was a momentous occasion. |
| 36. Notable Notorious |
Notable: Worth noticing; famous for good things. Notorious: Famous for bad things. |
He is a notorious criminal. |
| 37. Official Officious |
Official: Relating to an office/authority. Officious: Annoyingly eager to tell people what to do. |
The clerk was highly officious. |
| 38. Practical Practicable |
Practical: Based on experience, not theory. Practicable: Capable of being put into practice/done. |
Your plan sounds good, but it is not practicable. |
| 39. Respectful Respectable |
Respectful: Showing respect to others. Respectable: Deserving respect from others. |
The students were very respectful to the teacher. |
| 40. Sensible Sensitive |
Sensible: Practical, showing good sense. Sensitive: Easily affected or hurt. |
He is very sensitive to criticism. |
| 41. Social Sociable |
Social: Relating to society. Sociable: Friendly, enjoying the company of others. |
My neighbor is a very sociable person. |
| 42. Spiritual Spirituous |
Spiritual: Relating to the soul/religion. Spirituous: Containing alcohol. |
They served spirituous liquors at the party. |
| 43. Tolerant Tolerable |
Tolerant: Willing to accept behavior/beliefs of others. Tolerable: Able to be endured. |
The pain is severe but tolerable. |
| 44. Virtual Virtuous |
Virtual: Almost or nearly as described, or created by computer. Virtuous: Having high moral standards. |
She is a virtuous woman. |
| 45. Jealous Zealous |
Jealous: Feeling envy of someone's success/possessions. Zealous: Showing great energy/enthusiasm. |
He is a zealous supporter of the party. |
| 46. Sick Sickly |
Sick: Ill (used usually as a temporary state). Sickly: Often ill; in poor health generally. |
He was a weak, sickly child. |
| 47. First Foremost |
First: Number one in order. Foremost: Most important or prominent. |
Einstein was the foremost scientist of his time. |
| 48. Stationary Stationery |
Stationary: Not moving (Adjective). Stationery: Writing materials (Noun). |
The truck hit a stationary car. |
| 49. Fictional Fictitious |
Fictional: Invented for a story/book. Fictitious: False, made up to deceive. |
He gave a fictitious address to the police. |
| 50. Dual Duel |
Dual: Consisting of two parts (Adjective). Duel: A fight between two people (Noun). |
This car has dual controls. |
Absolute Adjectives & Order (OSASCOMP)
ЁЯФК Listen: The OSASCOMP Memory Trick
The Logic: Some adjectives express an idea that is already at its maximum limit (100%) or describe a fixed shape. Think about the word "Dead". You cannot be "more dead" or "most dead". You are either dead or alive.
Therefore, these words NEVER take 'more', 'most', '-er', or '-est'.
Memorize this SSC VIP List:
States: Perfect, Unique, Ideal, Chief, Universal, Extreme, Complete, Entire, Excellent, Absolute, Impossible, Supreme, Dead, Empty, Final, Fatal, Unanimous.
Shapes: Round, Square, Circular, Triangular, Spherical.
('Unique' means 'only one of its kind'. There are no levels to it.)
('Unanimous' means 100% agreement. It cannot be 'most'.)
('Fatal' means causing death. You cannot cause 'most' death.)
ЁЯТб Teacher's Hack: The "Almost" Trick
While you can never say "more perfect", you CAN say "almost perfect" or "nearly empty". This means it is close to the 100% mark, which is logically and grammatically correct!
In English, if you want to use three or four adjectives to describe a single noun (e.g., a bag), you cannot just throw them in any random order. They MUST follow a strict sequence.
Memorize the acronym: O - S - A - S - C - O - M - P.
| Letter | Meaning | What it answers | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| O | Opinion | What do you think of it? | Beautiful, Ugly, Delicious, Expensive, Horrible |
| S | Size | How big is it? | Big, Small, Tall, Short, Massive, Tiny |
| A | Age | How old is it? | Old, New, Young, Ancient, Antique |
| S | Shape | What shape is it? | Round, Square, Flat, Oval, Rectangular |
| C | Color | What color is it? | Red, Blue, Black, Green, Yellowish |
| O | Origin | Where is it from? | Indian, French, Lunar, American, Victorian |
| M | Material | What is it made of? | Wooden, Metal, Plastic, Silk, Leather |
| P | Purpose | What is it used for? | Sleeping (bag), Walking (stick), Sports (car) |
SSC Level Examples (Spot the Order)
тЭМ She bought a red, beautiful, big car.
тЬЕ She bought a beautiful, big, red car.
(Opinion тЮФ Size тЮФ Color)
тЭМ He sat at a wooden, old, huge table.
тЬЕ He sat at a huge, old, wooden table.
(Size тЮФ Age тЮФ Material)
тЭМ I found a leather, old, beautiful, brown bag.
тЬЕ I found a beautiful, old, brown, leather bag.
(Opinion тЮФ Age тЮФ Color тЮФ Material)
тЭМ He drives an American, expensive, red, sports car.
тЬЕ He drives an expensive, red, American, sports car.
(Opinion тЮФ Color тЮФ Origin тЮФ Purpose)
Adjective Mind Games
ЁЯФК Listen: Beat the Examiner
Trick 1: "As...As" and "So...As" Trap
The Trap: Examiners will put a Comparative degree word inside the "As...As" structure.
Teacher's Hack: The structure "As ____ As" or "So ____ As" is used to show equality. It MUST strictly contain the Positive Degree (V1 equivalent) of the adjective.
Trick 2: "Comparatively" and "Relatively"
The Trap: The words "Comparatively" and "Relatively" already contain the meaning of comparison. Using a comparative degree word after them is a Superfluous/Redundancy error!
Teacher's Hack: Always use the Positive Degree after the words 'comparatively' and 'relatively'.
Trick 3: The Hyphenated Measurement Trap
The Trap: When a noun indicating measure (rupee, year, mile) is connected by a hyphen (-) to a number, it acts as an Adjective. Adjectives can NEVER be pluralized!
('five-rupee' is an adjective describing the 'note')
Trick 4: The "O.C." Rule (Ordinal before Cardinal)
The Trap: SSC reverses the order of numbers.
Teacher's Hack: When an Ordinal number (First, Second, Third, Last) and a Cardinal number (One, Two, Three) come together, the Ordinal MUST always come first! Memorize the acronym O.C.
Trick 5: The "Enough" Position Trap
The Trap: Examiners place the word 'enough' *before* the adjective.
Teacher's Hack: The word 'Enough' has a dual personality.
тАв When used with a Noun, it comes BEFORE it (I have enough money).
тАв When used with an Adjective, it MUST come AFTER it!
('Smart' is an adjective, so 'enough' goes after it).
Trick 6: The "And" Balance Rule
The Trap: Joining a Superlative degree with a Positive degree using "and".
Teacher's Hack: The conjunction 'and' is a weighing scale. If you use two adjectives for the SAME noun, they MUST be in the same degree.
(Superlative + Superlative)
Trick 7: The "Times" Multiplier Trap
The Trap: Using a comparative degree (-er / more) after words like "times" (two times, three times).
Teacher's Hack: When you use a multiplier like 'Three times' or 'Five times', you CANNOT use the comparative degree. You must use "as + Positive Degree + as".
Previous Year SSC Questions (Mega Bank)
Test your knowledge with these 25 high-frequency, actual Adjective questions from CGL, CHSL, and CPO exams. Scroll down and click to reveal the detailed explanations.
Q1. He is junior than me in age. (CGL 2021)
Q2. She is the most perfect dancer. (CHSL 2020)
Q3. I have little money left, so I can buy this book. (CPO 2022)
Q4. Kolkata is further from the equator than Delhi. (CGL 2019)
Q5. He is elder than his brother by two years. (MTS 2021)
Q6. The weather is comparatively hotter today. (CGL 2022)
Q7. He is as smarter as his friend. (CHSL 2021)
Q8. Of the two brothers, Ram is the tallest. (CPO 2019)
Q9. She is more smarter than her sister. (CGL 2020)
Q10. I prefer coffee than tea. (MTS 2020)
Q11. Few people came to the meeting, so it was cancelled. (CHSL 2023)
Q12. I read few books I had in the library. (CGL 2018)
Q13. This is the most unique idea I have ever heard. (CPO 2021)
Q14. The soup tastes deliciously. (MTS 2022)
Q15. Higher you go, cooler you feel. (CGL 2022)
Q16. He did good in the examination. (CHSL 2019)
Q17. Ram is better than any boy in the class. (CPO 2020)
Q18. There is not some milk in the jug. (CGL 2021)
Q19. He is the most senior officer in the department. (CHSL 2022)
Q20. She bought a beautiful, red, big car. (CGL 2023)
Q21. This is relatively better than that. (MTS 2019)
Q22. He gave me much books to read. (CPO 2021)
Q23. No less than fifty students were present. (CGL 2020)
Q24. Between Ram and Shyam, Ram is the most intelligent. (CHSL 2020)
Q25. The later part of the movie was boring. (CGL 2022)
ADJECTIVES MOCK TESTS
Test your mastery with these real-time JS engines. Marking scheme: +1 for Correct, -0.25 for Incorrect.
Mock Test 1: IOR, Sensation & Quantifiers
Test 1 Submitted!
Detailed Review
Mock Test 2: Absolute, Pairs & Mind Games
Test 2 Submitted!
Detailed Review
Master of Adjectives! ЁЯМЯ
You have conquered the traps of IOR, Double Comparatives, Quantifiers, and OSASCOMP.
Would you like to move to ADVERBS or PREPOSITIONS next?