Mon
09
Apr
2012
What follows is quoted from a discussion of basic language structure.
A second way of classifying languages is based on the word order they use:
SOV (subject-object-verb) is preferred by the greatest number of languages. Included are the Indoeuropean languages of India, such as Hindi and Bengali, the
Dravidian languages of southern India, Armenian, Hungarian, Turkish and its relatives, Korean, Japanese, Burmese, Basque, and most Australian aboriginal languages.
Almost all SOV languages use postpositions ("therein lies a tale"), with a notable exception in Farsi (Persian). Most have the adjective preceding the
noun. Exceptions include Burmese, Basque and the Australian aboriginal languages, which have the adjective follow the noun.SVO (subject-verb-object) is the
second largest group, but has the largest number of speakers. They are split between languages that use prepositions ("I go to school") and ones that use
postpositions ("therein lies a tale").
Among the prepositional languages are the Romance languages, Albanian, Greek, the Bantu languages, languages of southeast Asia, including Khmer, Vietnamese, Thai, and Malay, and the
Germanic languages. Most of these have the adjective following the noun ("un enfant terrible)", except for the Germanic languages, which put the adjective
before the noun ("ein schreckliches Kind").
The second group use postpositions. These include Chinese, Finnish and Estonian, many non-Bantu languages of Africa such as Mandingo, and the South American indian language,
Guarani. The first three have adjectives before the noun, the others have adjectives after the noun. Some linguists believe that Chinese is moving towards becoming an SOV
language.
Next, we have the VSO (verb-subject-object) languages. In Irish, they say Cheannaich mi blobhsa -- “Bought I
blouse” -- for I bought a blouse.
These always use prepositions. Although a relatively small group, it does include most Semitic languages, including Arabic and Hebrew, Celtic languages such as Gaelic and Welsh, the
Polynesian languages, and a number of American indian languages such as Kwakiutl (British Columbia) and Nahuatl (Aztec). Most have the adjective after the noun. Kwakiutl and
Nahuatl have the adjective before the noun.
Only a handful of languages put the subject after the object. Several northwest US and Canadian indian languages use VOS, including
Coeur d’Alene, Siuslaw, and Coos. But the first uses prepositions and adjectives after noun, while the other two use postpositions and adjective before the noun!
There are also languages that use more than one of the standard systems. Notable of these is Tagalog and English. Strongly inflexional languages, such as Russian and Latin,
often permit varied word order as well.