The title of this post feels a bit odd to me, since I never really ‘taught adjectives’ to a huge extent during my career. Sure, we did some practice with agreements, I told classes a bit about word order and how adjectives could change meaning and we did work on comparatives and superlatives (see below). Overall, however, adjectives just come up a lot in input language and get picked up over time, implicitly, as the research calls it. That said, when it comes to getting students to understand and use adjectives successfully, it seems to me that we could consider the following aspects, in rough order of importance: 1. Which adjectives to teach. 2. The meaning of the adjectives 3. What they sound and look like 4. The order they appear in relation to nouns 5. Agreement Let’s consider each of the above in turn. 1. Which adjectives to teach Your school’s syllabus may dictate adjectives you need students to know. Keeping in mind the need to prioritise high-frequency vocabulary (words and chu...
I’ve previously blogged advice about teaching questions and the perfect tense in French. This time I thought I would look at negatives: the use of ‘ne’ with ‘pas’, ‘jamais’, ‘rien’, ‘plus’, ‘personne’, etc. A first point to make is that negatives may be tricky for English language L1 speakers because we do them quite differently with our ‘don’t’, ‘doesn’t’, ‘didn’t’, anything versus nothing, and variable syntactic use of no one, never, nowhere etc. Negatives are much harder in English than in French. This is worth mentioning to classes. Negatives in French are easy, notwithstanding awkward issues such as the fact that 'personne' may be understood as 'person' and 'plus' may be perceived as either 'more' or 'no more/no longer.' A second thing to say here is that I suspect we often see negatives as a grammatical (syntactic/word order) topic, and to some extent it is, but I would see negatives as mainly a lexical issue . The key thing for student...