Script Template
Script Template
Script Template
English 10
In the animated educational video, the background, which is a paper, serves as the
board for the details in the video, where the writing will be all throughout.
The writer first starts to write the title “Irregular Adjectives in Comparative and
Superlative Degrees”, and the name of the organization who’s responsible for the
video, “By The Creative Canvas”. While everything is being written, Hailey, the
speaker, talks at the same time.
HAILEY
Learn how irregular adjectives work in its
comparative and superlative forms in 1 minute!
(enthusiastically)
Before the speaker reads, the writing gets erased by the writer. The title “Irregular
Adjectives” is written, following the speaker’s pace, and so does its description “They
don’t follow a pattern, they turn into a new word in its comparative and superlative
form instead.” Gets added to the paper.
HAILEY
As its name suggests, irregular adjectives don’t follow
any consistent patterns and instead become a new word in
its degrees.
Every gets erased first, then once the reading of the phrase before the first comma in
the speaker’s line, the description;
“Comparative degree - words describing a noun by comparing it to another noun, either
to a lower or higher degree.” And;
“Superlative degree – words describing a noun by comparing it to two or more nouns
either to the highest or to the lowest degree.” Is written, following the speaker’s pace.
HAILEY
Just like regular adjectives, irregular adjectives in
comparative degree still compares a noun to another noun
of a lower or higher degree. In superlative degree, you
are comparing a noun to two or more other nouns either
to the highest or to the lowest degree.
Before the speaker talks, everything is erased, and then the table is added by writing,
Hailey speaks after the table is written, then when the first sentence is done being said,
the second sentence will be written in sync with the speaker.
3.
HAILEY
As you can see, the word “old” in positive degree can be
“older” or “elder” in its comparative form, and “eldest”
or “oldest” in its superlative form. Just a quick note
though, “elder” and “eldest” can function both as an
adjective and a noun, while “older” and “oldest” can only
be used as an adjective.