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Government and politics, Social and behavioural

Why conservatives like to use nouns more than liberals do

Researchers said their results “are compatible with previous work suggesting that language reflects, among other things, the individual’s goals and motives, including his or her political goals.”

12 January 2017

By Christian Jarrett

Our political leanings to the right or left reveal a fundamental aspect of our psyche: how much we're drawn to stability and security versus change and uncertainty. This manifests in our attitudes and personality traits. For instance, on average, conservatives tend to prefer established hierarchy and are more conscientious. Liberals favour equality and are more open to new experiences.

Now in the journal Political Psychology a group led by Aleksandra Cichocka at the University of Kent has extended this line of work by showing the link between political orientation and desire for certainty is reflected at even the most basic of levels: how much we like to use nouns.

Across two initial studies, featuring Polish-speaking survey participants in Poland and Arabic-speaking participants in the Lebanon, the research showed that people with more socially conservative leanings tended to favour nouns over adjectives. For instance, participants with a conservative orientation were more likely to say they'd choose to end the sentence "Magda had no doubts about the success of her business. Magda …" with the noun phrase "is an optimist" than with the adjective phrase "is optimistic".

This fits with the established link between having a conservative orientation and desiring stability because using a noun to describe someone implies more certainty and permanence about their state of being (past research has shown that even five-year-olds infer more permanence from noun descriptions than adjectival descriptions). Indeed, in the new surveys, the link between conservatism and noun preference seemed to be explained by participants' relative "need for structure" with high scorers on this measure expressing a dislike of ambiguity.

Cichocka and her colleagues, including John Jost at New York University who is responsible for much of the research in this field, also analysed 101 key speeches delivered by 13 US Presidents, from Roosevelt's Inaugural Address through to Obama's State of the Union Address in 2014. They found speeches by Republican presidents featured a greater proportion of nouns compared with their Democrat counterparts.

Overall, the researchers said their results "are compatible with previous work suggesting that language reflects, among other things, the individual's goals and motives, including his or her political goals."

Further reading

On the Grammar of Politics — or Why Conservatives Prefer Nouns

About the author

Christian Jarrett (@Psych_Writer) is Editor of BPS Research Digest