The English language is a wonderful thing, and we know some rules without knowing we know them.

‘Have you ever heard that patter-pitter of tiny feet? Or the dong-ding of a bell? Or hop-hip music? That’s because, when you repeat a word with a different vowel, the order is always I A O. Bish bash bosh. So politicians may flip-flop, but they can never flop-flip. It’s tit-for-tat, never tat-for-tit. This is called ablaut reduplication, and if you do things any other way, they sound very, very odd indeed.’ From ‘The Elements of Eloquence’ by Mark Forsyth.

#English #language

@MichaelPryor my favorite is how adjectives have a specific order they go in. Like "big red pimple", never "red big pimple".
@Drew @MichaelPryor and the exceptions, like the big bad wolf.
@Jiriki @Drew @MichaelPryor Or we can infer from the order of adjectives in English that "bad" is not actually an opinion about the wolf, but its function in the story.
@boostmarks @Drew @MichaelPryor
Yes, agree, if I understand you correctly.
Why it is a sad little wolf, and the big bad wolf.