Order of adjectives of quality
Several variations are possible but a fairly usual order
A) Several variations are possible but a fairly usual order is: adjectives of
(a) size (except little)
(b) general description (excluding adjectives of personality, emotion etc.)
(c) age, and the adjective little
(d) shape
(e) colour
(f) material
(g) origin
(h) purpose (these are really gerunds used to form compound nouns: walking stick, riding boots).
a long sharp knife a small round bath
new hexagonal coins blue velvet curtains
an old plastic bucket an elegant French dock
Adjectives of personality/emotion come after adjectives of physical description, including dark, fair, pale, but before colours:
a small suspicious official a long patient queue
a pale anxious girl a kindly black doctor
an inquisitive brown dog
B) little, old and young are often used, not to give information, but as part of an adjective-noun combination. They are then placed next to their nouns:
Your nephew is a nice little boy. That young man drives too fast.
little + old + noun is possible: a little old lady. But little + young is not.
When used to give information, old and young occupy position :
a young coloured man an old Welsh harp
Adjectives of personality/emotion can precede or follow young/old:
ex: a young ambitious man
ex: an ambitious young man
young in the first example carries a stronger stress than young in the second, so the first order is better if we wish to emphasise the age.
little can be used similarly in position (c):
a handy little calculator an expensive little hotel
a little sandy beach a little grey foal
But small is usually better than little if we want to emphasise the size. (For little meaning 'a small amount')
C) fine, lovely, nice, and sometimes beautiful, adjectives of size (except little), shape and temperature usually express approval of the size etc. If we say a beautiful big room, a lowly warm house, nice/fine thick steaks we imply that we like big rooms, warm houses and thick steaks.
fine, lovely and nice can be used similarly with a number of other adjectives:
fine strong coffee a lovely quiet beach a nice dry day
When used predicatively, such pairs are separated by and:
The coffee was fine and strong.
The day was nice and dry.
beautiful is not much used in this sense as a predicative adjective.
D) pretty followed by another adjective with no comma between them is an adverb of degree meaning very/quite: She's a pretty tall girl means She is quite/very tall. But a pretty, tall girl or, more usually, a tall, pretty girl means a girl who is both tall and pretty.

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