Useful tips for embellising with adjectives and/or adverbs

What have you been up to mate? Welcome back to my daily English blog or, specifically speaking, an arbitrary ditty! As usaul, I'm talking to myself in English right now as a means of boosting my English skills. Are you guys doing it as well? In doing so, you should be alright when it comes to English learning. If you can't technically do it, then let's contitue to read today's blog from cover to cover, ok?

As the title of this blog has already inferred somehow, you should aim to utilise some common adjectives or adverbs grammatically correctly and wisely when you are talking to yourself or someone in English. In order to make/look your sentences better or more sophisticated, you should use a wide range of adjectives or adverbs, not simply a main noun/adjective/verb all the time. Let me give you some examples here:

1. Instead of saying, "I'm a fan of bird-watching.", you could say "I'm an avid fan of bird-watching." (Adding the adjective, avid)

2. Instead of saying, "That model is beautiful.", you could say "That model is exquisitely beautiful." (Adding the adverb, exquisitely)

3. Instead of saying, "He won't work for money.", "He won't work solely for money." (Adding the adverb, solely)

How was that? Each sentence has been more embellished with either an adjective or adverb, hasn't it? Native speakers tend to use lots of diffferent adjectives or adverbs not just to make it better or sophisticated but also to emphasise or even exaggerate the stories they are telling. You guys should also emulate the way they talk. Ultimately, if the thing you need to talk is not pertinent to a legal affair, then it doesn't really matter whether the story you want to tell is 100% correct or not. A bit of exaggeration is totally acceptable or fine as long as you give it a swirl fluently and eloquently, which is more important than thinking too much of the contents themselves.

That's all for today. I'll catch you later, bye!