A developmental study of the pragmatic communication rule for prenominal adjective ordering*

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Abstract

First-, fourth-, and eighth-grade children and college undergraduates indicated preference for either normal or inverted orders of prenominal adjectives (for example, the large red car or the red large car, respectively) to describe a pictorial referent. Preference for the normal order of adjectives first appeared with the fourth graders. When communication context was vaxied by presenting a nonreferent that required a color adjective for discrimination from the referent, college students increased their preference for the inverted order. This separation of the acquisition of a linguistic rule from its utilization in communication was discussed. © 1974 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Schwenk, M. A., & Danks, J. H. (1974). A developmental study of the pragmatic communication rule for prenominal adjective ordering*. Memory & Cognition, 2(1), 149–152. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03197507

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