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Topic-Comment Structure

How information is organized into topic and comment in Spanish, English and Chinese.

Compare languages

Chinese is a classic topic-prominent language where the topic (what is being talked about) comes first, followed by the comment (what is said about it). English and Spanish are subject-prominent but allow fronting for emphasis.

Examples

Basic word order

SVO (with flexible fronting)

This book, I like

Este libro me gusta / A mí me gusta este libro

Money, I have; time, I don't

Dinero tengo; tiempo no

As for me, I disagree

En cuanto a mí, no estoy de acuerdo

What about you?

¿Y tú? / ¿Qué hay de ti?

Subject omission

Common (pro-drop)

Fronting for contrast

Common (A Juan lo vi)

Passive-like topic

Se vende casas (impersonal)

Examples

Basic word order

Strict SVO

This book, I like

This book I like / I like this book

Money, I have; time, I don't

Money I have; time I don't

As for me, I disagree

As for me, I disagree

What about you?

What about you? / How about you?

Subject omission

Rare (only in informal)

Fronting for contrast

Possible but marked (Him I saw)

Passive-like topic

Houses are sold (passive)

Examples

Basic word order

Topic-Comment (flexible)

This book, I like

zhèběnshūhuan

Money, I have; time, I don't

qiányǒushíjiānméiyǒu

As for me, I disagree

zhìtóng

What about you?

ne

Subject omission

Very common (context-dependent)

Fronting for contrast

Default structure (kànjiànle)

Passive-like topic

fángzimàiwánle (topic + result)

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Basic word order SVO (with flexible fronting)Strict SVOTopic-Comment (flexible)
This book, I like Este libro me gusta / A mí me gusta este libroThis book I like / I like this bookzhèběnshūhuan
Money, I have; time, I don't Dinero tengo; tiempo noMoney I have; time I don'tqiányǒushíjiānméiyǒu
As for me, I disagree En cuanto a mí, no estoy de acuerdoAs for me, I disagreezhìtóng
What about you? ¿Y tú? / ¿Qué hay de ti?What about you? / How about you?ne
Subject omission Common (pro-drop)Rare (only in informal)Very common (context-dependent)
Fronting for contrast Common (A Juan lo vi)Possible but marked (Him I saw)Default structure (kànjiànle)
Passive-like topic Se vende casas (impersonal)Houses are sold (passive)fángzimàiwánle (topic + result)

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Basic word order SVO (with flexible fronting)Strict SVOTopic-Comment (flexible)
This book, I like Este libro me gusta / A mí me gusta este libroThis book I like / I like this bookzhèběnshūhuan
Money, I have; time, I don't Dinero tengo; tiempo noMoney I have; time I don'tqiányǒushíjiānméiyǒu
As for me, I disagree En cuanto a mí, no estoy de acuerdoAs for me, I disagreezhìtóng
What about you? ¿Y tú? / ¿Qué hay de ti?What about you? / How about you?ne
Subject omission Common (pro-drop)Rare (only in informal)Very common (context-dependent)
Fronting for contrast Common (A Juan lo vi)Possible but marked (Him I saw)Default structure (kànjiànle)
Passive-like topic Se vende casas (impersonal)Houses are sold (passive)fángzimàiwánle (topic + result)

Examples in context

Basic word order

Spanish

SVO (with flexible fronting)

English

Strict SVO

Chinese

Topic-Comment (flexible)

This book, I like

Spanish

Este libro me gusta / A mí me gusta este libro

English

This book I like / I like this book

Chinese

zhèběnshūhuan

Money, I have; time, I don't

Spanish

Dinero tengo; tiempo no

English

Money I have; time I don't

Chinese

qiányǒushíjiānméiyǒu

As for me, I disagree

Spanish

En cuanto a mí, no estoy de acuerdo

English

As for me, I disagree

Chinese

zhìtóng

What about you?

Spanish

¿Y tú? / ¿Qué hay de ti?

English

What about you? / How about you?

Chinese

ne

Subject omission

Spanish

Common (pro-drop)

English

Rare (only in informal)

Chinese

Very common (context-dependent)

Fronting for contrast

Spanish

Common (A Juan lo vi)

English

Possible but marked (Him I saw)

Chinese

Default structure (kànjiànle)

Passive-like topic

Spanish

Se vende casas (impersonal)

English

Houses are sold (passive)

Chinese

fángzimàiwánle (topic + result)

Key Takeaways

Spanish: Subject-prominent with SVO order. Allows fronting for emphasis, but the grammatical subject remains fixed. Object fronting uses clitic prono...

English: Strictly subject-prominent with rigid SVO. Fronting is possible but marked and often requires special intonation. Subject omission is very l...

Chinese: Topic-prominent. The topic (not necessarily the grammatical subject) comes first. Comment follows. Subject omission is extremely common. No ...

Key concepts compared: Basic word order, This book, I like, Money, I have; time, I don't.

Last updated: June 4, 2026