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
PhDThe present thesis investigates adjective ordering across languages, with an emphasis on Greek an...
The current paper investigates experimentally whether, in a context requiring identifying green leav...
Recent research has proposed that adjective form (i.e., whether adjectives typically occur before or...
Adjective ordering preferences are robustly attested in English and many unrelated languages. In nom...
Previous studies have shown that speakers have robust adjective ordering preferences. For example, i...
We investigate adjective ordering preferences in Mandarin, a language that has been claimed to have ...
Adults have a collective tendency to choose certain adjective orderings in nominals with multiple ad...
Which is more correct, the “big fat cat” or the “fat big cat?” Why is a particular order preferred? ...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
I propose that ordering restrictions among adjectives (e.g., the big gray poodle) are driven by the ...
I argue there are four classes of adjectives relevant to syntactic ordering: predicative/intersectiv...
Background - Linguists and psychologists have explained the remarkable similarities in the orderings...
The problem undertaken here is to account for the relational placement in English of words tradition...
Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations driv...
Typological data shows a tendency for languages to exhibit harmonic (i.e. consistent) ordering betwe...
PhDThe present thesis investigates adjective ordering across languages, with an emphasis on Greek an...
The current paper investigates experimentally whether, in a context requiring identifying green leav...
Recent research has proposed that adjective form (i.e., whether adjectives typically occur before or...
Adjective ordering preferences are robustly attested in English and many unrelated languages. In nom...
Previous studies have shown that speakers have robust adjective ordering preferences. For example, i...
We investigate adjective ordering preferences in Mandarin, a language that has been claimed to have ...
Adults have a collective tendency to choose certain adjective orderings in nominals with multiple ad...
Which is more correct, the “big fat cat” or the “fat big cat?” Why is a particular order preferred? ...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
I propose that ordering restrictions among adjectives (e.g., the big gray poodle) are driven by the ...
I argue there are four classes of adjectives relevant to syntactic ordering: predicative/intersectiv...
Background - Linguists and psychologists have explained the remarkable similarities in the orderings...
The problem undertaken here is to account for the relational placement in English of words tradition...
Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations driv...
Typological data shows a tendency for languages to exhibit harmonic (i.e. consistent) ordering betwe...
PhDThe present thesis investigates adjective ordering across languages, with an emphasis on Greek an...
The current paper investigates experimentally whether, in a context requiring identifying green leav...
Recent research has proposed that adjective form (i.e., whether adjectives typically occur before or...