I found it quite interesting that adjectives are more related to people(subjectivity) and nouns are more related to objects(objectivity)
When you use adjectives, beautiful, wonderful, colorful, expensive etc., it is all from a subjective angle(subjectivity); And when you use nouns, books, tables, beds etc., they would think the nouns are the same thing from different people(objectivity)
Words too subjective are hard to convert to objective words(books, tables, beds), not that subjective will be easy(color, beauty, wonder), and it’s a struggling war between subjectivity and objectivity when words like: color -> colorful -> colorfulness and wonder -> wonderful -> wonderfulness
Some opinions:
- Learning more adjectives can make you more related to the human being
- Learning more nouns can make you more related to the universe(sciences are all about nouns)
- Chinese is not a language that strongly distinguishes adjectives and nous, so it also would be harder for Chinese to distinguish subjectivity and objectivity
- Most Chengyu in Chinese are adjectives, but sadly people rare use Chengyu in oral materials