Roger Woodham replies:Position of adjectives

Adjectives are normally placed before nouns and this is known as the modifier or attributive position. Thus, we would normally say:

Mission impossible, if I remember correctly, was originally the name of an American television series which was later made into a film which you have probably seen. There is, in fact, no reason for putting the adjective after the noun here other than for effect. It sounds original and therefore your attention is drawn to it.

exceptions to the general rule: adjectives after nouns

Attributive adjectives can be placed after the verb to be (and other copular verbs). Then we would have:

Copular verbs, which join adjectives to their subjects, describe the state of something or someone or a change of state. They include: be, seem, appear, look, sound, smell, taste, feel, get, become, stay, remain, keep, grow, go, turn:

Also attributive adjectives with their own complement, e.g. capable of achieving first-class degrees, usually require the whole expression to come after the noun rather than before it:

In a similar way, participles are placed after the nouns which they define:

In all of these last four examples, however, it is perhaps more normal to use a relative clause:

Finally, adjectives come after most measurement nouns and after some-, any- and no- words: