Topic Explanation and Use
Core idea
Adjectives can all be correct on their own, but they still need a natural order.
When several adjectives come before one noun, English usually follows a natural order. The most common order is opinion, size, age, shape, color, origin, material, and purpose.
Use adjective order to make descriptions sound natural. Even if every adjective is correct alone, the sentence sounds awkward when the order is random.
At B2 level, build one correct base sentence first, then add detail without breaking grammar control.
Use it here
- Place opinion adjectives before factual ones when both are present.
- Keep color, origin, and material closer to the noun.
- Use only the adjectives you really need; too many modifiers make the sentence heavy.
Watch it work
Remember this
- Decide the exact meaning before choosing the grammar form.
- Write the shortest correct version first.
- Add detail only after the grammar is stable.
- Check one risk at a time: form, order, agreement, or reference.
- Keep the sentence only if it stays clear in one reading.
Real-World Examples with Adjective Order
Example 1
Too weakShe bought a leather red bag for work.
BetterShe bought a red leather bag for work.
This correction matches the intended meaning and keeps Adjective Order natural.
Example 2
Too weakThey live in a house modern large near downtown.
BetterThey live in a large modern house near downtown.
This version sounds more natural because Adjective Order fits the sentence clearly.
Common Errors with Adjective Order
Common problem 1
placing adjectives in a random order before the noun
WeakShe bought a leather red bag for work.
StrongShe bought a red leather bag for work.
Fix: follow a natural sequence such as opinion, size, age, shape, color, origin, material
Common problem 2
putting color and material in unnatural order
WeakShe bought a leather black jacket for winter.
StrongShe bought a black leather jacket for winter.
Fix: keep a natural adjective order so the noun phrase reads smoothly
Common problem 3
stacking too many adjectives in random order
WeakThey rented a stone old beautiful house near downtown.
StrongThey rented a beautiful old stone house near downtown.
Fix: arrange adjectives in a consistent order: opinion, age, color/material, then noun
Interactive Practice Lab
Practice
First notice the right form. Then build it yourself. Then fix it in a full sentence.
Score: 0/4
Read for meaning first. If the meaning changes, the grammar usually has to change too.
1. Quick pick
Choose the stronger sentence for Adjective Order.
2. Build it
Put this Adjective Order sentence in the correct order.
Tap a chunk to move it down. Tap it again to send it back.
3. Type the fix
Rewrite the sentence so Adjective Order is correct.
Fix this: She adopted a small black lovely dog last week.
4. Final sort
Mark each sentence as correct or needing a fix.
He wore a blue cotton shirt to the interview.
He wore a cotton blue shirt to the interview.
We bought a beautiful old table from the market.
We bought an old beautiful table from the market.
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