Order of adjectives
Q:
As a native speaker, I never think about the order of adjectives used
to modify a particular noun. As a teacher, I need to show my students
how the adjectives line up they way they do in English. But…I can’t
explain this.
TF
Seattle
A:
Yes, it’s true that native speakers of English don’t say “a red new
car?or “some French expensive perfume.?English, like other languages,
has a sequence for the order of adjectives; it’s built into our grammar
language genes. Here it is:
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(1) Determiner:
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a, an, the, some, his, those
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(2) Sequence: words
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first, second, hundredth, next, last
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(3) Quantifiers:
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one, two, many, much, few, little, some
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(4) Impression:
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beautiful, awful, amazing, stupid
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(5) Physical Description:
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-Size:
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big, little, small, huge
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-Age:
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old, young, middle-aged, twenty-year-old
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-Shape:
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oblong, round, tall, rotund
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-Color:
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red, black, yellow, pumpkin, avocado
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(6) Origin:
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French, Italian, Japanese, pre-Colombian
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(7) Material:
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gold, silver, silk, copper, steel, plastic
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(8) Qualifier:
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(Noun used as adjective): book, clothes, family, tennis
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(Finally!)
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(9) The noun itself:
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book, clothes, family, box, cars, hair, eyes, game
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Choosing one representative word from several of these categories,
you could come up with a sentence like this:
Her first two generous, rich, old, fat American husbands left her
with a lot of money; then she married a brilliant, young, handsome,
poor, Canadian computer programmer and lived happily ever after.
Of course, it’s not likely that such a sentence would actually be uttered.
It becomes awkward to squeeze more than two or three adjectives into
one phrase, so people use alternate ways to describe the nouns. The
information in that contrived sentence above could be better stated
in this way:
Her first two husbands were rich, old, fat and generous; they left
her with a lot of money, and then she married a brilliant young Canadian
computer programmer who was handsome but poor, and?/p>
The adjectives of physical description may take a slightly different
order—the order of these adjectives at (d) (adjectives describing impression)
and (e) (adjectives used in physical description) are not as fixed as
those at the beginning and at the end of the list.
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