Thai Adjectives Quiz — Describe It Three-Level Game (Free)
If verbs are the engine of a Thai sentence, adjectives are what make it worth listening to. They are how you say the food is delicious, the traffic is terrible, the room is too small, the price is too high. Without adjectives you can state that things exist and that actions happen — but you cannot give an opinion, make a comparison, or describe anything in a way that sounds human. Adjectives are where Thai conversation starts to feel alive.
And here is the good news, continuing the theme from the verbs post: Thai adjectives are even simpler than Thai verbs. They do not conjugate, they do not agree with nouns in gender or number, and — this is the part that surprises everyone — they do not need a "to be" verb in front of them. In English you must say "the food is delicious." In Thai you simply say "food delicious." The adjective acts as its own predicate. This single feature removes an entire layer of grammar that trips up learners of European languages.
This post teaches the most useful everyday Thai adjectives, organised by the way they naturally pair as opposites, plus the all-important words for "very" and "a little" that let you fine-tune any description. The game at the end builds describing fluency across three levels. By the end, you will be able to give an opinion about almost anything in Thailand.
Adjectives Are Verbs in Disguise
The most important structural fact about Thai adjectives is that they function as stative verbs — verbs that describe a state rather than an action. This means an adjective can be the complete predicate of a sentence with no other verb needed. อาหารอร่อย (aahaan aroi) is a complete sentence meaning "the food is delicious" — literally just "food delicious." There is no word for "is" because the adjective aroi already carries the meaning of being in that state.
This also means adjectives take the same negation and modification as verbs. To say something is not delicious, you put ไม่ (mai — not, rising tone) before the adjective exactly as you would before a verb: ไม่อร่อย (mai aroi — not delicious). The rule you learned for negating verbs in Post 33 applies identically to adjectives.
The Opposite Pairs — Learn Them Together
The most efficient way to learn adjectives is in opposite pairs. Your brain stores them as a linked unit, and in conversation they come up together constantly — big and small, hot and cold, cheap and expensive. Here are the essential pairs every learner needs:
One crucial caution: the word for "new" is ใหม่ (mai — rising-low tone), which sounds dangerously close to ไม่ (mai — not) and ไหม (mai — question particle). These are three different words distinguished only by tone, all spelled with similar letters. Post 29 on tones covers this exact cluster — it is one of the most important tone distinctions in the entire language.
The Taste Adjectives — Essential for Food Culture
Thailand is a food culture, and describing taste is one of the most useful adjective skills you can develop. These words come up at every meal, every market, every street stall:
The single most useful sentence in Thai food culture is อาหารอร่อย (aahaan aroi — the food is delicious), and a close second is เผ็ดมาก (phet mak — very spicy), which you will need both to warn the cook and to describe what you are experiencing. Note that Thai people genuinely appreciate when foreigners can describe taste — it signals real engagement with the food rather than just eating it.
Very and A Little — The Intensity Dial
Raw adjectives are useful, but real description requires intensity. Thai handles this with two essential modifiers that turn any adjective up or down. The word มาก (mak — very, a lot) goes AFTER the adjective to intensify it, and นิดหน่อย (nit noi — a little, a bit) softens it.
Notice the positions: มาก (mak — very) and นิดหน่อย (nit noi — a little) go AFTER the adjective, while ไม่ (mai — not) goes BEFORE it. This after-for-intensity, before-for-negation pattern is consistent across all Thai adjectives, so once you learn it for one word it works for every word.
เผ็ดน้อยๆ (phet noi noi — just a little spicy) or ไม่เผ็ด (mai phet — not spicy) at a food stall. Thai food can be far spicier than most visitors expect. Knowing how to dial the spice down with adjectives is genuinely useful for your comfort — and Thai cooks will happily adjust if you ask.
Describing People — Adjectives for Appearance and Character
Beyond objects and food, adjectives let you describe people, both their appearance and their character. These come up constantly in conversation about friends, family, and the people around you:
The word สวย (suay — beautiful) carries an important tone warning. Said with the correct rising tone it means beautiful. But said with a falling tone, a similar-sounding word means "unlucky" or "bad luck." This is a real source of accidental comedy for learners, and another reminder of why the tone work in Post 29 matters so much. When in doubt, the context of complimenting someone usually makes your intended meaning clear, and Thai people are forgiving — but it is worth being aware of.
Comparing Things — More, Most, and the Same
Once you can describe single things, the natural next step is comparison. Thai builds comparatives and superlatives with two simple words added to any adjective: กว่า (kwa — more than) for comparatives, and ที่สุด (thii sut — the most) for superlatives.
These two words unlock a huge amount of expressive power. อันไหนถูกกว่า (an nai thuuk kwa — which one is cheaper) is essential for shopping. อร่อยที่สุด (aroi thii sut — most delicious) lets you praise the best dish. The structure is completely regular: you never change the adjective itself, you simply add kwa or thii sut after it. Combined with the question words from Post 32, you can now ask and answer comparison questions about anything.
Feeling and Condition Adjectives
A large category of Thai adjectives describes how you feel or the condition of something. Like the taste words, these double as stative verbs, so you can build a complete sentence with just a pronoun and the adjective:
The word สบาย (sabai — comfortable, well) is one of the most culturally important adjectives in Thai. It appears in the greeting สบายดีไหม (sabai dii mai — are you well?), in the famous phrase สบายๆ (sabai sabai — relaxed, easygoing, no worries), and in countless everyday contexts. Sabai captures a whole Thai philosophy of comfort and ease that has no single English equivalent. When a Thai person describes a place, a situation, or a feeling as sabai, they are paying it one of the highest compliments in the culture.
The Quality Adjectives — Good, Bad, and Beautiful
Some adjectives are so fundamental they appear in nearly every conversation. These are the core quality judgements that let you express basic approval or disapproval of anything:
The word ดี (dii — good) is one of the first and most versatile adjectives you will use. It combines with other words to form compounds you have already met: ใจดี (jai dii — kind, good-hearted), ดีใจ (dii jai — happy, good-hearted in the joyful sense), and สบายดี (sabai dii — doing well). Learning dii early pays off because it appears throughout the language as a building block of more complex expressions.
✅ Post 33 — Verbs (adjectives work like stative verbs)
✅ Post 29 — Tones (suay beautiful vs falling-tone meaning)
✅ Post 12 — Spice Levels (phet and intensity)
✅ Post 34 — Adjectives (you are here)
The Describe It! game below has three levels. Level 1 matches adjectives to meanings. Level 2 picks the right adjective for a situation. Level 3 — the hardest — builds complete descriptive sentences with intensity and comparison. 🎯
Level Complete!
Score
📋 Adjective Reference - Essential Pairs & Words
| Thai | Roman | Meaning | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| ใหญ่ | yai | big | Size |
| เล็ก | lek | small | Size |
| ยาว | yao | long | Size |
| สั้น | san | short | Size |
| สูง | sung | tall/high | Size |
| เตี้ย | tia | short (height) | Size |
| หนัก | nak | heavy | Size |
| เบา | bao | light | Size |
| ร้อน | rawn | hot | Condition |
| เย็น | yen | cold/cool | Condition |
| ใหม่ | mai | new | Condition |
| เก่า | kao | old | Condition |
| เร็ว | reo | fast | Quality |
| ช้า | cha | slow | Quality |
| แพง | phaeng | expensive | Quality |
| ถูก | thuuk | cheap | Quality |
| ง่าย | ngai | easy | Quality |
| ยาก | yaak | difficult | Quality |
| ดี | dii | good | Quality |
| แย่ | yae | terrible | Quality |
| อร่อย | aroi | delicious | Taste |
| หวาน | wan | sweet | Taste |
| เค็ม | khem | salty | Taste |
| เปรี้ยว | priao | sour | Taste |
| เผ็ด | phet | spicy | Taste |
| ขม | khom | bitter | Taste |
| สวย | suay | beautiful | People |
| หล่อ | law | handsome | People |
| น่ารัก | na rak | cute | People |
| ฉลาด | chalaat | smart | People |
| ใจดี | jai dee | kind | People |
| ขยัน | khayan | hardworking | People |
| เหนื่อย | nueay | tired | Feeling |
| หิว | hiu | hungry | Feeling |
| อิ่ม | im | full | Feeling |
| สบาย | sabai | comfortable | Feeling |
| ดีใจ | dii jai | happy | Feeling |
| สนุก | sanuk | fun | Feeling |
Intensity: mak (very, after) / nit noi (a little, after) / mai (not, before). Comparison: kwa (more) / thii sut (most).
🎨 Why Thai Description Feels Different
Once you start using adjectives in Thai, you notice something: the language describes the world with remarkable economy. Because adjectives need no helping verb, descriptions become compact and punchy. Where English says the food is very delicious and very cheap, Thai says aahaan aroi mak lae thuuk mak with the adjectives doing all the work. This compactness is part of what gives spoken Thai its quick, lively rhythm.
The Doubling Trick
Thai has a charming feature where doubling an adjective softens it or makes it more casual and friendly. สบายๆ (sabai sabai) does not mean very comfortable - it means relaxed, easygoing, no big deal. ง่ายๆ (ngai ngai) means nice and simple. เร็วๆ (reo reo) means quickly. This reduplication is everywhere in casual speech and instantly makes you sound more natural and less textbook. The doubled form carries a warmth that the single form lacks.
Adjectives and Thai Smile Culture
Thai social interaction runs on positive description. Complimenting food as อร่อย (aroi), calling a place สวย (suay), describing someone as ใจดี (jai dee) - these small acts of positive description are social lubricant in Thailand. Thai people give and receive compliments generously, and having a stock of positive adjectives ready lets you join in this warmth. A foreigner who can say aroi mak with genuine enthusiasm after a meal will find doors opening everywhere.
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