I learned this one from my English teacher back in high school and I think it's the right sequence.
My teacher made an acronym for it to make it easy to remember
DENUSISHAQUACONO
DE- denominator
NU- number
SI- size
SHA- shape
QUA- quality
CO- color
NO- noun
Hope it helped
-tazdi
In each language, multiple adjectives are arranged in a specific series, which is normally learned as spoken language rules. So in English we say "the two big old gray houses" rather than "gray the old two big houses."
(see the related question)
Number
article ordinal cardinal size/shape/age descriptive adj. color origin
The last 6 big rusty brown local material Non modified
Iron chairs.
One order is shown by the acronym AQOSASCOMP or ANOSASCOMP:
A-articles
Q-quantity / number
O-opinion
S-size
A-age
S-shape
C- color
O-origin
M-material
P-purpose (often part of a compound noun such as Golf ball or knitting needles)
Often this seems obvious when writing, without knowing exactly why it sounds proper.
Multiple adjectives applied to the same noun or noun phrase are arranged in a specific order, e.g. a big green plant not a green big plant.
A general sequence from first to last is:
1. Determiners such as articles and numbers (e.g. the, many, three)
2. Observation adjectives including subjectives (e.g. bright, pretty)
3. Size and shape adjectives (e.g. big, round)
4. Age adjectives (e.g. old, new)
5. Color adjectives
6. Origin or source (e.g. nationalities such as English or Russian)
7. Material or construction adjectives (e.g. cotton, brick, wood)
8. Qualifiers and noun adjuncts (as in porch swing, test results)
Examples of such constructions are "the pretty petite young Russian serving girl" or "a big red French woolen head scarf." These can be separated as needed by using conjunctions such as and and but.
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Here is a similar set of 8 guidelines:
1. Quantifier : some of, all of, both
2. Article, Possessive, or Demonstrative: the, a, an / this, that / my, his
3. Number Sequence: three, second, next
4. Quality, Size : wonderful, clean, large
5. Shape: round, square, flat
6. Color : red, yellow, black
7. Origin : Japanese, Italian, French
8. Material : metal, ceramic, wood
Examples:
Some of the hungry gentlemen
The last great civilization
Ten big round metal rings
The beautiful Japanese ceramic vase
Either of the small green apples
My three lovely daughters
An interesting wooden statue
The third red plastic container
Series of adjective also need to have commas between them
What are the sequence of adjectives
putang ina kau!! :P
The adjective is "serial."
Adjectives and adverbs that describe an absolute state or condition and do not have comparative or superlative forms
big, small, tall, large, beautiful, ugly, cute,
Failing was the main reason of leaving school
the two kind of adjectives are: 1.DESCRIPTURE ex.beautiful,big,round,white and LIMITING ADJECTIVES.... ex.one-fourth, ten sorry no pictures
Adjectives are the words that describe nouns; the word tree is a noun, a word for a thing. Some adjectives that can describe a tree are:averagebeautifulbloomingbushycutdamagedevergreenfloweringgreengrowingleaflessleafylonemagnificentnativeoldstrongtallunusualyoung
He thinks quickly, swiftly, accurately, solmenly, confidently, and curiously. Why ask?
Adjectives are used to make sentences more descriptive. You can still make an interesting sentence without adjectives.
Examples of adjectives:ableamiableamplebadbestbittercarefulcourteouscrunchydampdeardrasticelasticenviousequalfabulousfairfungentlegloriousgrumpyhardhighhungryicyillitchyjazzyjealousjustkeenkhakiknowledgeablelatelooseluckymadmerrymostnewnicenotoriousoldopenovalperfectpoorpurequerulousquiet
This is my book, not yours. Their house is next to ours. Have you seen his new car? Is this your cat or someone else's?
no
Not all sentences require both nouns and adjectives. A sentence can be complete with just a subject (noun) and a verb. Adjectives are used to describe nouns and add more detail, but they are not always required for a sentence to be grammatically correct.
what are the example of basal adjectives
Some examples are followed in a sentences: The furry rat scurried across the marble floor. The rat had smooth fur and the cutest face!
Interrogative adjectives are: Which, when who, how or why. Answer by:QLA
Tangy is sweet, orangy, and yummy.
the commas go between items in a series, between adjectives, and behind a dependent clause.
pilon