It was originally shown by Longuet-Higgins and colleagues that when the electronic Schrödinger equation is solved as a function of the nuclear coordinates the adiabatic electronic wavefunction can undergo a change of sign after completing a closed circuit. This geometric phase occurs for a circuit around a conical intersection, and in particular around a conical intersection corresponding to a linear Jahn—Teller effect. The adiabatic wavefunctions are classified here under a group called the adiabatic multiple group, which is a generalization of the ‘vibronic double group’ of C 3v introduced by Hougen, and is distinct from the familiar electron-spin double group. Although the real electronic wavefunctions can be only double-valued, the groups can have higher multiplicity because of the possibility of different circuits. For a number of symmetric- and spherical-top point groups, the adiabatic multiple group is shown to be the direct product of the point group with a phase group. The adiabatic multiple group can be applied to individual adiabatic orbitals, and so to configurations built from these orbitals. This leads to the rule that the linear Jahn—Teller effect vanishes in the single-configuration approximation for configurations containing non-degenerate electrons plus an even number of e electrons. There does not appear to be any cancellation effect for electron configurations of cubic molecules containing f electrons.