Subjectivity Predicts Adjective Ordering Preferences
Author(s) -
Gregory Scontras,
Judith Degen,
Noah D. Goodman
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
open mind
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2470-2986
DOI - 10.1162/opmi_a_00005
Subject(s) - adjective , noun , syntax , linguistics , psychology , subjectivity , meaning (existential) , philosophy , epistemology , psychotherapist
From English to Hungarian to Mokilese, speakers exhibit strong ordering preferences in multi-adjective strings: “the big blue box” sounds far more natural than “the blue big box.” We show that an adjective’s distance from the modified noun is predicted not by a rigid syntax, but by the adjective’s meaning: less subjective adjectives occur closer to the nouns they modify. This finding provides an example of a broad linguistic universal—adjective ordering preferences—emerging from general properties of cognition.
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