Language SOV

A language SOV is, in syntactic Typologie, a Langue whose Phrase S follow, generally, a prone order - object Verbe.

The Japanese is of this type. Certain languages, as the French with the pronouns objects (“I see it”), use this order in a minor way for certain particular turnings of sentence. Grammar Latin E also has this syntax.

In very an other field, that of data processing, the machines with pile use this order. Ex: 2+3*4 which must be read as 2+ (3*4) transforms into Forth in 2 3 4 * + . I pile up 2, then 3, then 4. Then, I remove and multiply the last two numbers contained in the pile (that is to say 3 and 4), I deposit result 12 in the pile. Lastly, I add 2 and 12 to deposit 14 in the pile.

The comprehension of a language SOV can sometimes be diverting for a person speaking a language SVO (for example a French-speaking ), since it should await the end of a sentence to know the principal verb and thus the direction of this sentence. Nevertheless, it is necessary in all the cases to await the end of the sentence to seize its exact content of it.

Be-X-old: SOV

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