Is it true that, in general, modifiers should be placed close to the words they modify?

1 Answer
Nov 21, 2016

Yes.

Explanation:

It's fairly easy to conceptualize. A modifier, such as an adjective or superlative, is easiest to understand when it's closest to the word it's modifying.

For example:

A big truck is hard to get into.
VS
A truck is hard to get into when it's big.

The idea is to keep it as simple as possible. Even though they're both correct, one is much less ambiguous than the other, while being much more succinct.