Like most things in French, adjectives have to agree. i. e. become feminine if the thing they are describing is feminine and plural if the thing they are describing is plural. For example: un grand garç on une grande fille deux grands garç ons deux grandes filles This seems straightforward enough but use the interactions to find out more about irregular adjectives and position of adjectives. Irregular adjectives1. Adjectives that already end in 'e' cannot add an extra 'e' in the feminine but they can add an 's' in the pluralFor example: un exercice facile des exercices faciles une é preuve facile des é preuves faciles Adjectives that end in 'é' can add an extra 'e' to make them feminine as well as an 's' to make them plural.2. Adjectives that end in 'f' become 've' in the feminine. Both add 's' in the plural. For example: un garç on sportif des garç ons sportifs une fille sportive des filles sportives 3. Adjectives that end in 'x' become 'se' in the feminine. For example: un garç on curieux des garç ons curieux une fille curieuse des filles curieuses 4. Adjectives ending in 'er' become 'è re' in the feminine. For example: un cher garç on deux chers garç ons une chè re fille deux chè res filles 5. Adjectives ending in on/en/el/il double the last letter then add an 'e' to become feminine. For example: gentil → gentille6. Some adjectives are totally irregular and just have to be learned, most notably: vieux (m) → vieille (f) nouveau → nouvelle beau → belle blanc → blanche Position of adjectivesMost adjectives in French go after the noun they are describing. e. g. colours - un pull bleuThe adjectives that go before the noun are usually short and quitecommon wordsFor example: Masculine Feminine grand (e) petit(e) long (ue) beau (belle) nouveau (nouvelle) jeune vieux (vielle) Try this exercise: Type in the correct form of the adjective in the space: /**//**//**//**//**//**//**//**/