Upgrade Your English Conversation Adjective intensifiers

Hello I’m Emma from mmmEnglish!

Now I have to say

I’m extremely excited about this lesson today.

Because I know that you’re

an exceptionally dedicated student,

so this incredibly useful lesson,

is going to help you to take your English speaking skills

to the next level.

The tips that I share today are going to help

your speaking and your writing skills

sound much more powerful.

So how are we going to do that?

We’re going to use intensifiers.

We’re going to use intensifiers to make your language

more powerful when you’re talking about extremes.

So intensifiers are words that are added

before an adjective to make it stronger.

It’s simple, you take any old, boring adjective,

like ‘boring’ and then you add an intensifier to it.

The lecture was really boring.

See? I bet you didn’t even know that you already know

how to use some adjective intensifiers.

But ‘really’ and ‘very’ are pretty stock standard

intensifiers, you know.

They’re not really showcasing your English skills.

Let me show you what I mean.

That shop assistant was rude.

That shop assistant was really rude.

That shop assistant was extremely rude.

Did you notice how the tone of each

sentence changed?

It suddenly became much stronger as we got to the end

so the role of an intensifier in your sentence is

exactly what it sounds like!

It’s there to intensify the adjective,

to make the meaning stronger.

And that, my friends, allows you to introduce

more emotion and more feeling into your English.

Using intensifiers is going to help you to enhance

the meaning of an adjective,

to emphasize a point.

They’ll also help you to sound really impressive,

definitely when you’re speaking,

but these intensifiers will help you to write

more compelling essays and reports too.

So this lesson is definitely worth sticking around for.

Now there are intensifiers

that show high intensity, medium intensity,

and low intensity.

And intensity is talking about strength,

so there are intensifiers that are

high in strength, that are medium in strength

or that are low in strength.

So we’ll start with intensifiers that are high intensity.

So these intensifiers are going to take your adjective

to the extreme upper limits

of the meaning of your adjective. They’re very strong.

And there are quite a few of these strong intensifiers

to choose from.

Extremely. Completely. Absolutely. Utterly.

Totally. Entirely. Exceptionally. Insanely.

And incredibly.

Okay so let’s test these out.

Her daughter is intelligent.

So this sentence is okay but to emphasise the point,

we can use an intensifier to make it stronger.

Her daughter is exceptionally intelligent.

Wow! She is very, very, very, very, smart.

She’s been stressed lately.

She’s been incredibly stressed lately.

The exam was difficult.

The exam was extremely difficult.

The sound was deafening!

The sound was absolutely deafening!

We are exhausted.

We are utterly exhausted.

So all of these intensifiers are at the high, extreme

top end of the meaning of the adjective.

So I have a question for you.

If you’ve just eaten lunch an hour ago,

can you use any of these adjectives

to say that you’re feeling hungry again?

No, they’re much too strong.

But what about if you hadn’t eaten since

yesterday morning

and that was over twenty-four hours ago?

Could you use any of them then?

Probably, because I think you’d be pretty hungry.

So write this sentence for me in the comments

below this video. Use one of the intensifiers

to explain how you feel

  • you haven’t eaten for over twenty-four hours!

You’re…

Quick! Write it!

But, please be careful.

It is possible to overuse intensifiers,

particularly these high extremes,

so your sentence can really quickly become too full

of strong emotions.

And you’ll start to sound a little insincere.

If this sentence was a person, it would sound like this.

The most unbelievably phenomenal thing

has happened!

My incredibly brilliant and utterly amazing brother

just met an extremely wealthy man

who owns an exceptionally successful company.

That’s a bit too much!

So just take it easy okay?

With intensifiers, less is more.

It’s better to have one or two

really appropriate intensifiers

than to have too many in your sentence, right?

Now, not all intensifiers are high-intensity.

Not everything in life is so extreme, right?

So we also use intensifiers to show

medium and low intensity.

For medium intensity, these are really common ones.

Really. Very. Pretty. Quite. And particularly.

So these intensifiers are not quite as strong

and they’re not quite as intense.

But they are good to use if you want to emphasise

a point a little, but not too much.

Your resume is impressive.

Your resume is quite impressive.

Those desserts are good.

Those desserts are particularly good.

The movie was okay but it got

pretty violent towards the ends.

And for low intensity, you could use

‘mildly’, ‘relatively’ or ‘somewhat’.

So these are low strength intensifiers.

They’re useful to emphasise that the adjective

is not strong.

So imagine that you went to a comedy show last night

and it was okay. It was kind of funny.

Definitely wasn’t as funny as you

thought it would be though.

So the show was mildly amusing.

Not much of a compliment for a comedy show

if it was mildly amusing.

So let’s compare intensifiers.

She’s been stressed lately.

She’s been mildly stressed lately.

She’s been pretty stressed lately.

She’s been incredibly stressed lately.

See how we can add meaning and emphasis

to our sentence just by adding these intensifiers?

Learning to use them is definitely

going to help your English to sound more powerful

and confident.

So it’s time for your homework!

It’s your turn to write some sentences

in the comments below this video.

We’re expecting serious weather conditions tomorrow.

So can you see the adjective in that sentence there?

‘serious’, right?

So I want you to take this sentence

and rewrite it three times in the comments

with a high, medium and low intensifier.

Let’s see how many different sentences

we can get in the comments together.

Well that’s it for this lesson.

And now you know how to add more emotion

into your English and how to express yourself

clearly and naturally using intensifiers.

So please do write even more sentences

in the comments below this video.

I read them, I see them and I love giving

little tweaks and corrections to make sure that you’ve

understood my lesson correctly.

And if you did enjoy the lesson, please give it a ‘like’

and subscribe to the mmmEnglish Channel.

I make new English lessons here every week

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and come and check out

some of my other lessons, right here.

Thanks for watching

and I’ll see you in the next lesson.

Bye for now!