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Word Order

How sentences are structured in Spanish, English and Chinese.

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English is strictly SVO. Spanish is mostly SVO but flexible for emphasis. Chinese is SVO with topic-comment flexibility and no inflection to guide interpretation.

Examples

Basic order

SVO (mostly)

Subject omission

Yes (verb conjugation marks person)

Adjective position

After noun (usually)

Question word order

Invert or keep SVO

Place and time

Flexible (often at end)

Topic prominence

No (subject-prominent)

Examples

Basic order

Strict SVO

Subject omission

No (subject always required)

Adjective position

Before noun

Question word order

Auxiliary + subject + verb

Place and time

End of clause

Topic prominence

No (subject-prominent)

Examples

Basic order

SVO (with topic flexibility)

Subject omission

Yes (context reveals it)

Adjective position

Before noun (de particle)

Question word order

Keep SVO, add particle

Place and time

Before verb (topic position)

Topic prominence

Yes (topic-comment structure)

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Basic order SVO (mostly)Strict SVOSVO (with topic flexibility)
Subject omission Yes (verb conjugation marks person)No (subject always required)Yes (context reveals it)
Adjective position After noun (usually)Before nounBefore noun (de particle)
Question word order Invert or keep SVOAuxiliary + subject + verbKeep SVO, add particle
Place and time Flexible (often at end)End of clauseBefore verb (topic position)
Topic prominence No (subject-prominent)No (subject-prominent)Yes (topic-comment structure)

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Basic order SVO (mostly)Strict SVOSVO (with topic flexibility)
Subject omission Yes (verb conjugation marks person)No (subject always required)Yes (context reveals it)
Adjective position After noun (usually)Before nounBefore noun (de particle)
Question word order Invert or keep SVOAuxiliary + subject + verbKeep SVO, add particle
Place and time Flexible (often at end)End of clauseBefore verb (topic position)
Topic prominence No (subject-prominent)No (subject-prominent)Yes (topic-comment structure)

Examples in context

Basic order

Spanish

SVO (mostly)

English

Strict SVO

Chinese

SVO (with topic flexibility)

Subject omission

Spanish

Yes (verb conjugation marks person)

English

No (subject always required)

Chinese

Yes (context reveals it)

Adjective position

Spanish

After noun (usually)

English

Before noun

Chinese

Before noun (de particle)

Question word order

Spanish

Invert or keep SVO

English

Auxiliary + subject + verb

Chinese

Keep SVO, add particle

Place and time

Spanish

Flexible (often at end)

English

End of clause

Chinese

Before verb (topic position)

Topic prominence

Spanish

No (subject-prominent)

English

No (subject-prominent)

Chinese

Yes (topic-comment structure)

Key Takeaways

Spanish: SVO by default, but flexible. The verb conjugation carries so much information that word order can shift for emphasis without losing clarity...

English: Rigidly SVO. Almost no flexibility. The subject is mandatory, and auxiliaries are required for questions and negation.

Chinese: SVO in structure, but topic-comment in spirit. Almost any element can be moved to the front for emphasis, because there are no inflectional ...

Key concepts compared: Basic order, Subject omission, Adjective position.

Last updated: June 4, 2026