In linguistic typology, a subject–object–verb (SOV) language is one in which the subject, object, and verb of a sentence always or usually appear in that order. If English were SOV, "Sam oranges ate" would be an ordinary sentence, as opposed to the actual Standard English "Sam ate oranges" which is subject–verb–object (SVO).
Among natural languages with a word order preference, SOV is the most common type (followed by subject–verb–object; the two types account for more than 87% of natural languages with a preferred order).[3]
Standard Chinese is generally SVO but common constructions with verbal complements require SOV or OSV. Some Romance languages are SVO, but when the object is an enclitic pronoun, word order allows for SOV (see the examples below). German and Dutch are considered SVO in conventional typology and SOV in generative grammar. They can be considered SOV but with V2 word order as an overriding rule for the finite verb in main clauses, which results in SVO in some cases and SOV in others. For example, in German, a basic sentence such as "Ich sage etwas über Karl" ("I say something about Karl") is in SVO word order. Non-finite verbs are placed at the end, however, since V2 only applies to the finite verb: "Ich will etwas über Karl sagen" ("I want to say something about Karl"). In a subordinate clause, the finite verb is not affected by V2, and also appears at the end of the sentence, resulting in full SOV order: "Ich sage, dass Karl einen Gürtel gekauft hat." (Word-for-word: "I say that Karl a belt bought has.")
A rare example of SOV word order in English is "I (subject) thee (object) wed (verb)" in the wedding vow "With this ring, I thee wed."[4]
Properties
SOV languages have a strong tendency to use postpositions rather than prepositions, to place auxiliary verbs after the action verb, to place genitive noun phrases before the possessed noun, to place a name before a title or honorific ("James Uncle" and "Johnson Doctor" rather than "Uncle James" and "Doctor Johnson") and to have subordinators appear at the end of subordinate clauses. They have a weaker but significant tendency to place demonstrative adjectives before the nouns they modify. Relative clauses preceding the nouns to which they refer usually signals SOV word order, but the reverse does not hold: SOV languages feature prenominal and postnominal relative clauses roughly equally. SOV languages also seem to exhibit a tendency towards using a time–manner–place ordering of adpositional phrases.
In linguistic typology, one can usefully distinguish two types of SOV languages in terms of their type of marking:
dependent-marking has casemarkers to distinguish the subject and the object, which allows it to use the variant OSV word order without ambiguity. This type usually places adjectives and numerals before the nouns they modify, and is exclusively suffixing without prefixes. SOV languages of this first type include Japanese and Tamil.
head-marking distinguishes subject and object by affixes on the verb rather than markers on the nouns. It also differs from the dependent-marking SOV language in using prefixes as well as suffixes, usually for tense and possession. Adjectives in this type are much more verb-like than in dependent-marking SOV languages, and hence they usually follow the nouns. In most SOV languages with a significant level of head-marking or verb-like adjectives, numerals and related quantifiers (like "all", "every") also follow the nouns they modify. Languages of this type include Navajo and Seri.
In practice, of course, the distinction between these two types is far from sharp. Many SOV languages are substantially double-marking and tend to exhibit properties intermediate between the two idealised types above.
Many languages that have shifted to SVO word order from earlier SOV retain (at least to an extent) the properties: for example, the Finnish language (high usage of postpositions etc.)
Eneritzek eskatu du inork irakurri nahi ez zuen liburua
Eneritzek
Eneritz (+ERG)
Parts
eskatu
asked for
Agent
du
AUX has
Verb
+ + +
+ + +
Objects
Eneritzek eskatu du {+ + +}
{Eneritz (+ERG)} {asked for} {AUX has} {+ + +}
Parts Agent Verb Objects
Eneritz requested the book nobody wanted to read
Dravidian languages
The Dravidian languages commonly exhibit or prefer SOV order.
Kannada
ನಾನು ಮನೆ ಕಟ್ಟಿದೆನು.
ನಾನು
Naanu
I
Subject
ಮನೆ
mane
the house
Object
ಕಟ್ಟಿದೆನು
kaTTidenu
built
Verb
ನಾನು ಮನೆ ಕಟ್ಟಿದೆನು
Naanu mane kaTTidenu
I {the house} built
Subject Object Verb
I built the house.
Malayalam
ഞാൻ പുസ്തകം എടുത്തു.
ഞാൻ
ñān
I
Subject
പുസ്തകം
pustakam̥
(the) book
Object
എ
(-e)
ACC
എടുത്തു
eṭuttu
took
Verb
ഞാൻ പുസ്തകം എ എടുത്തു
ñān pustakam̥ (-e) eṭuttu
I {(the) book} ACC took
Subject Object {} Verb
I took the book.
Pustakam̥ + -e = pustakatte (പുസ്തകത്തെ)
Tamil
Tamil being a strongly head-final language, the basic word-order is SOV. However, since it is highly inflected, word order is flexible and is used for pragmatic purposes. That is, fronting a word in a sentence adds emphasis on it; for instance, a VSO order would indicate greater emphasis on the verb, the action, than on the subject or the object. However, such word-orders are highly marked, and the basic order remains SOV.
நான் பெட்டியை திறப்பேன்.
நான்
Nān
I-NOM
Subject
பெட்டியைத்
peṭṭi-yai
box-ACC
Object
திறப்பேன்.
tiṟa-pp-ēn.
open-FUT-1SG
Verb
நான் பெட்டியைத் திறப்பேன்.
Nān peṭṭi-yai tiṟa-pp-ēn.
I-NOM box-ACC open-FUT-1SG
Subject Object Verb
I will open the box.
Telugu
నేను ఇంటికి వెళ్తున్నాను.
నేను
Nēnu
I-NOM
Subject
ఇంటికి
iṇṭi-ki
home-DAT
Object
వెళ్తున్నాను
veḷ-tunnā-nu
go-PRES-1SG
Verb
నేను ఇంటికి వెళ్తున్నాను
Nēnu iṇṭi-ki veḷ-tunnā-nu
{I-NOM} {home-DAT} {go-PRES-1SG}
Subject Object Verb
I am going home.
Georgian
The Georgian language is not extremely rigid with regards to word order, but is typically either SOV or SVO.
მე ლექსი დავწერე.
მე
me
I
Subject
ლექსი
leksi
poem
Object
დავწერე.
davc'ere
[I]wrote
Verb
მე ლექსი დავწერე.
me leksi davc'ere
I poem {[I]wrote}
Subject Object Verb
I wrote (a) poem.
Indo-European languages
SOV word order is quite common among Indo-European languages, leading to a common hypothesis that this reflects the original preferred word order of the ancestral Proto-Indo-European language. However, the question remains unsettled.
Albanian
Albanian has free word order, but generally prefers SVO. SOV occurs only in poetic language.
Agimi librin e mori.
Agimi
Agimi
Subject
librin
the book
Object
e mori
took
Verb
Agimi librin {e mori}
Agimi {the book} took
Subject Object Verb
Agimi took the book. (It was Agimi who took the book)
Linguistic consensus holds that the Proto-Germanic language had free word order but preferred SOV. While some Germanic languages (including English and most North Germanic languages) have transitioned to SVO, SOV remains a feature of some major modern Germanic languages, including German and Dutch. However, these modern SOV Germanic languages also exhibit V2 word order, which supersedes the "default" SOV such that many sentences are rendered subject-verb-object.
Dutch
Dutch is SOV combined with V2 word order. The non-finite verb (infinitive or participle) remains in final position, but the finite (i.e. inflected) verb is moved to the second position. Simple verbs look like SVO, non-finite verbs (participles, infinitives) and compound verbs follow this pattern:
German is SOV combined with V2 word order. The non-finite verb (infinitive or participle) remains in final position, but the finite (i.e. inflected) verb is moved to the second position. Simple verbs look like SVO, compound verbs follow this pattern:
Er hat einen Apfel gegessen.
Er
He
Subject
hat
has
Auxiliary
einen
an
Apfel
apple
Object
gegessen.
eaten.
Verb
Er hat einen Apfel gegessen.
He has an apple eaten.
Subject Auxiliary {} Object Verb
He has eaten an apple.
The word order changes also depending on whether the phrase is a main clause or a dependent clause. In dependent clauses, the word order is always entirely SOV (cf. also Inversion):
Ancient Greek had free word order but generally preferred SOV sentences:
ὁ ἀνὴρ τὸν παĩδα φιλεῖ.
ὁ
ho
The
ανήρ
anḗr
man
Subject
τὸν
tòn
the
παĩδα
paîda
child
Object
φιλεῖ.
phileî
loves.
Verb
ὁ ανήρ τὸν παĩδα φιλεῖ.
ho anḗr tòn paîda phileî
The man the child loves.
{} Subject {} Object Verb
The man loves the child.
This is distinct from Modern Greek, where SVO is preferred.
Indo-Aryan languages
Vedic Sanskrit, the oldest known of the Indo-Aryan languages, was an inflected language and very flexible in word order, allowing all possible word combinations. Its descendant, Classical Sanskrit, shared this feature but generally preferred SOV sentences.
re is a particle that indicates the accusative case and 'sei' indicates past tense declarative. Here, e is pronounced as the 'i' in 'girl' and 'ei' is pronounced as the 'ay' in 'say'.
This preference is not fixed in all Indo-Aryan languages. Punjabi, for instance, may be characterised as following a Subject—Object—Verb typology overall, but some flexibility is permitted, and this tendency does not follow in sentences involving personal pronouns. Examples are shown here in both Shahmukhi (top, right-to-left) and Gurmukhi (bottom, left-to-right). The word forms used reflect those typical of spoken language. For Shahmukhi, vocalised forms with vowel diacritics have been used to explicitly indicate the forms used; in typical writing these are omitted in most words where regular patterns allow this information to be inferred contextually.
The following sentence exhibits the typical SOV word order tendency. The verb phrase is in retrospective perfect participle form, indicating completion of the action, and takes on the feminine plural suffixes in agreement with the gender and number of the object. The subject here is a masculine plural form; in this context it does not require agreement from the verb.
By contrast, in the following sentence the person involved, referred to by a first-person pronoun, is the object rather than the subject. The significance of people as a semantic category takes precedent over the SOV word order tendency, and the person is typically first even in sentences where that person is the object. The pronoun "mainū̃" has the postposition "nū̃" agglutinated to it, approximately meaning "to." Abstract concepts like desires and emotions typically come "to" people as agentive subjects.
مینُوں سیب چاہِیدا اے۔ / ਮੈਨੂੰ ਸੇਬ ਚਾਹੀਦਾ ਏ।
مینُوں
ਮੈਨੂੰ
mainū̃
Me-to
Object
سیب
ਸੇਬ
seb
apple
Subject
چاہِیدا
ਚਾਹੀਦਾ
cāhīda
desiring
Verb
اے
ਏ
ae
exists
Copula
مینُوںسیبچاہِیدااے
ਮੈਨੂੰ ਸੇਬ ਚਾਹੀਦਾ ਏ
mainū̃ seb {cāhīda} ae
Me-to {apple} desiring exists
Object Subject Verb Copula
I want an apple.
The copula in Punjabi is extraverbal in function. While it can constitute the predicate of a sentence on its own, it does not enter the verb phrase when used alongside a full lexical verb. Instead, it acts as a marker of existence remote to or near to the situation. Some western dialects such as Pothohari have forms of the copula to indicate occurrence of a situation in the future.[5]
However, some Indo-Aryan languages exhibit V2 word order in combination with SOV, most prominently Kashmiri. The non-finite verb (infinitive or participle) remains in final position, but the finite (i.e. inflected) part of the verb appears in second position. Simple verbs look like SVO, whereas auxiliated verbs are discontinuous and adhere to this pattern:
کور چہے ثونٹہ کہیوان
کور
kuur
girl
Subject
چہے
chhi
is
Auxiliary
ثونٹہ
tsũũţh
apples
Object
کہیوان
khyevaan
eating
Verb
کور چہے ثونٹہ کہیوان
kuur chhi tsũũţh khyevaan
girl is apples eating
Subject Auxiliary Object Verb
The girl is eating apples.
Given that Kashmiri is a V2 language, if the word tsũũţh 'apple' comes first then the subject kuur 'girl' must follow the auxiliary chhi 'is': tsũũţh chhi kuur khyevaan [Lit. "Apples is girl eating."]
Also, the word order changes depending on whether the phrase is in a main clause or in certain kinds of dependent clause. For instance, in relative clauses, the word order is SOVAux:
Classical Latin was an inflected language and had a very flexible word order and sentence structure, but the most usual word order in formal prose was SOV.
Servus puellam amat
Servus
Slave.NOM
Subject
puellam
girl.ACC
Object
amat
loves
Verb
Servus puellam amat
Slave.NOM girl.ACC loves
Subject Object Verb
The slave loves the girl.
Again, there are multiple valid translations (such as "a slave") that do not affect the overall analysis.
Romance languages
Although their common ancestor Latin had free word order and preferred SOV, the modern Romance languages lost the Latin declension that enabled free word order and in general require subject-verb-object structures. However, remnants of SOV remain, particularly the cliticobject pronouns common in Romance grammar. For instance, in French:
SVO form: Eu hei-de fazê-lo amanhã or eu farei o mesmo amanhã
Japanese
The basic principle in Japanese word order is that modifiers come before what they modify. For example, in the sentence "こんな夢を見た。" (Konna yume o mita),[7] the direct object "こんな夢" (this sort of dream) modifies the verb "見た" (saw, or in this case had). Beyond this, the order of the elements in a sentence is relatively free. However, because the topic/subject is typically found in sentence-initial position and the verb is typically in sentence-final position, Japanese is considered an SOV language.[8]
A closely related quality of the language is that it is broadly head-final.[10]
Korean
내가 상자를 연다.
내–가
Nae-ga
I-SBJ
Subject
상자–를
sangja-reul
box-OBJ
Object
열–ㄴ–다.
yeonda.
open-PRES-IND
Verb
내–가상자–를열–ㄴ–다.
Nae-ga sangja-reul yeonda.
I-SBJ box-OBJ open-PRES-IND
Subject Object Verb
I open the box.
–가/–이-ga/-i is a particle that indicates the subject. –를/–을-(r)eul is a particle that indicates the object.
나na "I" is changed to 내– nae- before –가-ga, and the verb stem 열– yeol- is changed to 여– yeo- before –ㄴ다-nda.
Mongolian
ᠪᠢᠨᠣᠮᠤᠩᠰᠢᠪᠠ
Би ном уншив.
Би
Bi
I
Subject
ном
nom
a book
Object
уншив
unshiv
read
Verb
{Би ном уншив.} {} {}
Би ном уншив
Bi nom unshiv
I {a book} read
Subject Object Verb
I read a book.
Quechua
Quechuan languages have standard SOV word order. The following example is from Bolivian Quechua.
Ñuqaqa papata mikhurqani.
Ñuqa-qa
I-TOP
Subject
papa-ta
potato-ACC
Object
mikhu-rqa-ni
eat-PAST-1SG
Verb
Ñuqa-qa papa-ta mikhu-rqa-ni
I-TOP potato-ACC eat-PAST-1SG
Subject Object Verb
I ate potatoes.
Sino-Tibetan languages
SOV is believed to have been the "default" order of the protolanguage of the Sino-Tibetan family. Most Sino-Tibetan languages exhibit SOV order; however, the largest sub-branch of the family, the Sinitic or Chinese languages, are uniformly SVO, with some SOV-derived features.
Generally, Chinese varieties all feature SVO word order. However, especially in Standard Mandarin, SOV is tolerated as well. There is even a special particle 把 (bǎ) used to form an SOV sentence.[11]
The following example that uses 把 is controversially labelled as SOV. 把 may be interpreted as a verb, meaning "to hold". However, it does not mean to hold something literally or physically. Rather, the object is held figuratively, and then another verb is acted on the object.[citation needed]
SOV structure is widely used in railway contact in order to clarify the objective of the order.[12]
我把蘋果吃了.
我
Wǒ
I
Subject
把
bǎ
sign for moving object before the verb
Sign
蘋果
píngguǒ
apple
Object
吃了.
chīle.
ate
Verb
我 把 蘋果 吃了.
Wǒ bǎ píngguǒ chīle.
I {sign for moving object before the verb} apple ate
Subject Sign Object Verb
I ate the apple. (The apple we were talking about earlier)
The Turkic languages all exhibit flexibility in word order, so any order is possible. However, the SOV order is the "default" one that does not connote particular emphasis on any part of the sentence; alternate orders are possible, but are used for emphasis. For instance, in Turkish, the following is the "default" way of saying "Murat ate the apple":
Murat elmayı yedi.
Murat
Murat
Subject
elmayı
apple
Object
yedi
ate
Verb
Murat elmayı yedi
Murat apple ate
Subject Object Verb
Murat ate the apple.
However, this sentence could also be constructed as OSV (Elmayı Murat yedi.), OVS (Elmayı yedi Murat.), VSO (Yedi Murat elmayı.), VOS (Yedi elmayı Murat.), or SVO (Murat yedi elmayı.), to indicate the relative importance of the subject, object, or the verb.
The "idealized" profile of the Uralic languages has subject-verb-object word order. However, some Uralic languages, including the most widely spoken (Hungarian) prefer SOV.
The protolanguage of the Uralic language family is understood to have exhibited SOV order.[13][14]
Hungarian
Hungarian word order is free, although the meaning slightly changes. Almost all permutations of the following sample are valid, but with stress on different parts of the meaning.
^Crystal, David (1997). The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN0-521-55967-7.
^Andreas Fischer, "'With this ring I thee wed': The verbs to wed and to marry in the history of English". Language History and Linguistic Modelling: A Festschrift for Jacek Fisiak on his 60th Birthday. Ed. Raymond Hickey and Stanislaw Puppel. Trends in Linguistics, Studies and Monographs 101 (Berlin, New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1997), pp.467-81
^Ahmadi, S. (2020, December). Building a Corpus for the Zaza–Gorani Language Family. In Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on NLP for Similar Languages, Varieties and Dialects (pp. 70-78).
^Makino, Seiichi; Tsutsui, Michio (March 1999) [First published March 1986]. A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Grammar. The Japan Times, Ltd. p. 16. ISBN4-7890-0454-6.
^Siegel, Melanie; Bender, Emily M. (2004). "Head-Initial Constructions in Japanese"(PDF). In Müller, Stefan (ed.). Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar, Center for Computational Linguistics, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications. pp. 244–260.
^Bakró-Nagy, Marianne; Laakso, Johanna; Skribnik, Elena K., eds. (2022). The Oxford guide to the Uralic languages. Oxford guides to the world's languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0-19-876766-4. As regards constituent order, Proto-Uralic was most obviously an SOV language with postpositions.
^Janhunen, Juha. 1982. On the structure of Proto-Uralic. Finno-Ugrische Forschungen 44. 23–42. Cited in Katalin É. Kiss. 2023. The (non-)finiteness of subordination correlates with basic word order: Evidence from Uralic.
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DH.9C Australian registered DH.9C G-AUED c.1923 Role passengerType of aircraft National origin United Kingdom Manufacturer Airco First flight late 1921 Number built 19[1] Developed from Airco DH.9 The Airco DH.9C was a British passenger aircraft.[1] Development and design After World War I there were many surplus Airco DH.9 light bombers, designed by Geoffrey de Havilland, available for the emerging air transport business. At first stripped DH.9s were used to carry one passenger …
Italian footballer and manager This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.Find sources: Claudio Gentile – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this messag…
سطح المحيط الأطلسي حيث يتقابل مع طبقة الحدود الكوكبية للأرض والتروبوسفير. موجات على ساحل المحيط. هذه الرسوم المتحركة تستخدم بيانات علوم الأرض من مجموعة متنوعة من أجهزة الاستشعار على الأرض التابعة لناسا لرصد الأقمار الصناعية لقياس معلمات علم المحيطات الفيزيائية: مثل التيار…
Spanish association football team Football clubReal Oviedo VetustaFull nameReal Oviedo, S.A.D. VetustaNickname(s)Carbayones (Azules) Blues (Oviedistas)Founded1929 (Reformed in 2006)GroundCiudad Deportiva El Requexón, Oviedo, Asturias, SpainCapacity3,000PresidentMartín PeláezHead coachRoberto AguirreLeagueSegunda Federación – Group 12022–23Segunda Federación – Group 1, 7th of 18 Home colours Away colours Third colours Real Oviedo Vetusta is a Spanish football club based in Oviedo, in t…
Kepulauan Pangeran EdwardPeta Kepulauan Pangeran EdwardProyeksi ortografis berpusat di Kepulauan Pangeran EdwardGeografiLokasiSamudra HindiaKoordinat46°53′19″S 37°44′08″E / 46.888739°S 37.735658°E / -46.888739; 37.735658Koordinat: 46°53′19″S 37°44′08″E / 46.888739°S 37.735658°E / -46.888739; 37.735658Luas335 km2Titik tertinggiMascarin Peak (1.242 m)PemerintahanNegara Afrika SelatanKependudukanPenduduk0 (T…
This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Mengkibol – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Town in Malaysia in JohorMengkibol Town in MalaysiaOther transcription(s)MengkibolMengkibol in Johor, Malay Peninsular and MalaysiaShow map of JohorMengkibolMengk…
Martian dune field Abalos Undae dunes at Abalos Scopuli, the scarp of Abalos Mensa. The ice layers on the cap and basal formations are also visible. The picture was taken by the HiRISE camera on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and was enhanced by NASA in RGB colour. Abalos Undae (Latin for Abalos Waves) is a dune field on Mars in the periphery of Planum Boreum, the Martian North pole. It is one of the officially named northern circumpolar dune fields, along with Olympia, Hyperboreae, and S…
Species of hickory native to the southern USA and northern Mexico For other uses, see Pecan (disambiguation). Pecan Carya illinoinensisMorton Arboretum acc. 1082-39*3 Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)[1] Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae Clade: Tracheophytes Clade: Angiosperms Clade: Eudicots Clade: Rosids Order: Fagales Family: Juglandaceae Genus: Carya Section: Carya sect. Apocarya Species: C. illinoinensis Binomial name Carya illinoinensis(Wangenh.) K.Ko…