| Got home from camping last spring.
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| Saw people, places, and things.
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| We barely had arrived,
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| Friends asked us to describe
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| The people, places, and every last thing.
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| So we unpacked our adjectives.
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| I unpacked «frustrating"first.
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| Reached in and found the word «worst.»
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| Then I picked «soggy"and
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| Next I picked «foggy"and
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| Then I was ready to tell them my tale,
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| 'Cause I’d unpacked my adjectives.
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| Adjectives are words you use to really describe things.
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| Handy words to carry around.
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| Days are sunny, or they’re rainy.
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| Boys are dumb or else they’re brainy.
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| Adjectives can show you which way.
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| Adjectives are often used to help us compare things,
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| To say how thin, how fat, how short, how tall.
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| Girls who’re tall get taller.
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| Boys who’re small get smaller,
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| Till one is the tallest and the other’s the smallest of all.
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| We hiked along without care.
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| Then we ran into a bear!
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| He was a hairy bear!
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| He was a scary bear!
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| We beat a hasty retreat from his lair,
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| And described him with adjectives!
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| Spoken: Woah! |
| Boy, that was one big, ugly bear!
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| Spoken: (You can make even adjectives out of the other parts of speech like
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| Verbs and nouns. |
| All you have to do is tack on an ending like «-ic»
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| Or «-ish"or «-ary."For example: This boy can grow up to be a huge man,
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| but still have a boyish face.
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| Boy is a noun, but the ending «-ish"makes it an adjective, boyish,
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| that describes the huge man’s face. |
| Get it?)
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| Next time you go on a trip,
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| Remember this little tip:
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| The minute you get back,
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| They’ll ask you this and that.
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| You can describe people, places, and things.
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| Simply unpack your adjectives.
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| You can do it with adjectives.
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| Tell 'em about it with adjectives.
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| You can shout it with adjectives. |