Adjective After Certain Verbs

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Araştırma Görevlisi
An adjective can come after some verbs, such as: be, become, feel, get, look, seem, smell, sound

Even when an adjective comes after the verb and not before a noun, it always refers to and qualifies the subject of the sentence, not the verb.

Look at the examples below: subject verb adjective

* Ram is English.
* Because she had to wait, she became impatient.
* Is it getting dark?
* The examination did not seem difficult.
* Your friend looks nice.
* This towel feels damp.
* That new film doesn't sound very interesting.
* Dinner smells good tonight.
* This milk tastes sour.
* It smells bad.

These verbs are "stative" verbs, which express a state or change of state, not "dynamic" verbs which express an action. Note that some verbs can be stative in one sense (she looks beautiful | it got hot), and dynamic in another (she looked at him | he got the money). The above examples do not include all stative verbs.

Note also that in the above structure (subject verb adjective), the adjective can qualify a pronoun since the subject may be a pronoun.

# Adjective Order
# Adjective Before Noun
 
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