The standard sentence word order is -- subject + verb + object
The Standard English sentence order is subject-verb-object. How does this facilitate clarity and ease of communication for the reader?
The Standard English sentence order is subject-verb-object. How does this facilitate clarity and ease of communication for the reader?
The Standard English sentence order is subject-verb-object. How does this facilitate clarity and ease of communication for the reader?
A sentence is not constructed according to the syntactical conventions of standard English is said to be non-standard.
It speeds communication and helps the reader understand the main point.
It speeds communication and helps the reader understand the main point
Standard English in written format must include a subject and a predicate, in order to form a sentence. Adjectives, adverbs, and conjunctions can help one form more complicated types of grammatically correct structured sentences, but in order to write standard English or to speak it, one must have a subject come first and the correct conjugation of the corresponding verb, or predicate, second.
There is no word in English that cannot begin or end a sentence. A direct object like them is an unusual opening in Standard English, but not wrong. English word order is flexible for effect, and there is a big, though subtle, difference between "I don't like them" and "Them I don't like."
The standard word order in Japanese is Subject-Object-Verb (SOV). This means that the subject comes first, followed by the object, and finally the verb.
yes if you use the standard form english
This is the order of letters on a standard English keyboard.
The word 'tremple' is not a standard word in the English language.