Nothing made me feel more inculcated into my own language than the idea of stacked adjectives. In an English speaker’s subconscious mind, multiple adjectives have a specific order if accumulative. When they fall out of that order, the brain glitches, and the meaning can be lost, confused, or even misconstrued.
Adjectives
We learn in school that adjectives fall into categories, such as color, size, shape, age, etc. When multiple adjectives are used in a sentence, they appear in one of two types of groups: coordinate or cumulative adjectives.
An example of coordinate adjectives is, “It’s a black, brown, and white cat.” The adjectives are all in the same category of color, can be understood in any order, and must be separated with commas.
“I have two cute little pink pigs,” is a sentence with cumulative adjectives. With each successive adjective, categorical information is accumulated about the noun they modify and don’t require commas between them. The crux of stacked adjectives is the order that they are expected to appear.
Stacked Adjectives
Though there’s nothing semantically different between “a white big house” and “a big white house,” the second aligns itself to an English speaker’s internal ordering of adjectives – the result of a linguistic potty training we don’t even remember. An invisible code snaps into place and an adjectival conga line forms with all the modifiers in a proper queue:
- Quantity or number
- Quality or opinion
- Size
- Age
- Shape
- Color
- Proper adjective (nationality, place of origin, or material)
- Purpose or qualifier
There are linguists and laymen alike who oppose this strict order, such as size after opinion, arguing that a person is no less correct or clear in saying “a mean little dog” or “a little mean dog.” Nonetheless, patterns are imprinted from an early age and set with children’s stories like My Naughty Little Sister or Lily’s Purple Plastic Purse. (There is the curious case of “the big bad wolf” that doesn’t follow the size after opinion rule. That is the subject of another Fun Facts About English.)
Adjective order is still flexible enough for changing the character or meaning of an object being described. For example, a “fake Japanese watch” is a knock-off of a Japanese-made watch, but a “Japanese fake watch,” is a thing (dummy, toy, or phony) from Japan masquerading as a watch.
It would be impossible for most of us to elucidate this adjectival order, though we employ it in our language every day. Take the following sentence for example:
“This is a yellow new French cotton handsome jacket.”
It’s difficult to discern what the sentence is trying to convey and comes off like an adjective salad. In their proper order, the descriptors should be aligned thusly:
“This is a handsome new yellow French cotton jacket.”
Of course, one can stack adjectives so high that it becomes a categorical nightmare to mentally sort — whether you’re listening or speaking. This is why it’s often recommended that we limit the number of adjectives in a sentence to keep the lingual conveyor moving smoothly, for example:
“This is a handsome new yellow jacket. It’s from France and made of cotton.”
The Test
Imagine that you’re a foreign speaker of English. You’ve spent weeks memorizing adjectival order to answer test questions like the five below. Marvel at the sorting function that activates in your native English brain! The answers are below. Good luck and let me know your score in the comments!
- Which sentence uses the correct order of adjectives?
A. We took a ride on a green old Korean bus.
B. We took a ride on a Korean old green bus.
C. We took a ride on an old green Korean bus. - Which sentence uses the correct order of adjectives?
A. My brother rode a beautiful big black Arabian horse in the parade.
B. My brother rode a beautiful Arabian big black horse in the parade.
C. My brother rode a big black beautiful Arabian horse in the parade.
For the next three questions, insert the adjectives that are in the correct order. - I bought a pair of _________________boots.
A. new nice yellow rain
B. nice new yellow rain
C. yellow nice new rain - Put the money into that __________________box.
A. little old round red
B. round little old red
C. little old red round - She was surprised to get a ________________ puppy for her birthday!
A. little beagle cute ten-week-old
B. cute ten-week-old little beagle
C. cute little ten-week-old beagle
Answers: 1-C, 2-A, 3-B, 4-A, 5-C
You might also be interested to learn about the most common adjectives, why Big Bad Wolf follows a different adjectival order, or how to begin teaching stacked adjectives to your youngest ESL students! Read more on the Kinney Brothers Publishing blog!
Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.
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