Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
On the other hand, has argued against an underlying SVO analysis.
It is an nominative-accusative language and has SVO word order.
SVO gives the company license to embellish its designs and provide a more personal service.
Using the guidelines above, the unmarked word order is then SVO.
Could a 30th anniversary SVO be in the works?
Moreover, this suggests that the underlying word order is indeed SVO.
When arguments are not incorporated, however, an SVO word order is preferred.
The most commonly used SVO measures are the following.
A basic rule file for an SVO language might look like:
SVO has been shown to be predictive of important behavioral variables, such as:
SVO corresponds to how much weight a person attaches to the welfare of others in relation to the own.
Data is relayed in real-time to monitoring systems at SVO.
Variations on the basic SVO pattern occur in certain types of clause.
From a subject's choices in the primary items, the SVO angle can be computed.
The basic word order tends to be SVO.
It is an Austronesian language with an SVO phrase structure.
If two nouns of the same relative "status" are together in a sentence, the SVO word order is followed.
The basic structure of the constituent is SVO.
However, the Czech language belongs to the SVO type.
Verb-subject-object structure is thought to be derived from the SVO structure.
The language follows a SVO word order.
Although it was critically acclaimed, a high sticker price kept the SVO from becoming a sales success.
For SVO languages, either order is common.
Word order is relatively free, but the unmarked order is SVO.
The main word order in Kosraean is SVO, but can sometimes change with the different kind of sentences said.
There is a change from the older verb-subject-object word order to subject-verb-object.
Languages in which zero-marking is widespread are almost all subject-verb-object.
The order subject-verb-object may be more common than verb-subject-object.
In some modern dialects basic word order has become a fixed subject-verb-object, probably under influence from Spanish.
As illustration, the writer cited the syntactic order in French: subject-verb-object.
Ido word order is generally the same as Esperanto (subject-verb-object).
Serbo-Croatian is a pro-drop language with flexible word order, subject-verb-object being the default.
As we have seen, questions can be easily formed by rearranging the order of the sentence from subject-verb-object to verb-subject-object.
Berta has the typical word order subject-verb-object.
For ex., the Russian allows to use subject-verb-object in any order and "shuffle" parts to bring up a slightly different contextual meaning each time.
I tend to write subject-verb-object.
The sequence 'subject-verb-object' is typical, like Mandarin, although 'subject-object-verb' is also possible using particles.
Lithuanian has an SVO (subject-verb-object) as the main word order:
Lao is a subject-verb-object (SVO) language, although the subject is often dropped.
The basic sentence structure in Creole is Subject-Verb-Object.
The primary word order is SVO (subject-verb-object).
Coptic typically shows subject-verb-object (SVO) word order, as in the following examples:
Bai has a basic syntactic order of subject-verb-object (SVO).
Khmer is generally a subject-verb-object (SVO) language.
In linguistic typology, subject-verb-object (SVO) is a sentence structure where the subject comes first, the verb second, and the object third.
Again, a generalisation is captured by describing these as subject-verb-object (SVO) modified by V2.
The basic word order of subject-verb-object is common across Chinese dialects, but there are variations in the order of the two objects of ditransitive sentences.
Some, like English, use subject-verb-object (SVO) ordering, as in the sentence "I like you."
It assists children with language disorders to correctly set universal word order parameters to their English Subject-Verb-Object word order setting.
Subject-verb-object (typical sequence): The sentence in the typical sequence would be: ngo tsot dok ň.