Making Statements in EnglishA2
Craft clear English statements using essential sentence structures. Learn subject-verb-object order and common patterns for confident communication.
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Prerequisites
Word Order
English declarative sentences normally follow a fixed core order that places the subject before the verb and the object after the verb. Adverbials usually come after the object or at the end of the clause, while time and place phrases often move to the front for emphasis or clarity. This basic pattern is the foundation for Simple Sentences and supports later changes such as questions and negatives.
| Slot | Position | Function | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The subject names who or what the clause is about. | ||
| 2 | The verb shows the action, state, or link. | ||
| 3 | The object receives the action from the verb. | ||
| Later position | The adverbial adds time, place, manner, or frequency. |
Basic SVO
The most common English clause pattern is subject plus verb plus object. It appears with transitive verbs that need a direct object to complete the meaning. In this pattern, the object normally follows the verb directly, and the clause reads as a complete statement.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Intransitive
Some verbs do not take a direct object, so the clause stops after the verb or continues only with an adverbial. These intransitive patterns are complete because the verb does not require an object to express a full meaning. The subject still comes first, but the clause feels lighter and often shorter than a transitive sentence.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Linking
Linking verbs connect the subject to a complement instead of showing a direct action. The complement may be an adjective that describes the subject or a noun phrase that identifies it. Common linking verbs include forms of be, seem, become, look, and feel.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Ditransitive
Some verbs take two objects, usually an indirect object and a direct object. The indirect object names the recipient, and the direct object names the thing given, shown, or sent. This pattern is common with verbs of transfer such as give, send, teach, and show.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Object Complement
Some verbs can be followed by an object and then an object complement. The object complement describes, renames, or transforms the object, and it often follows verbs such as make and name. This pattern lets the clause express a result as part of the sentence structure.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Modifier Order
English places modifiers before a noun in a fairly stable order. Determiners usually come first, then adjectives, and then the noun itself. When more than one adjective appears, general opinion usually comes before size, age, color, or material.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Adverb Placement
Adverbs often appear in mid position, end position, or at the beginning of a sentence. Mid position is common with auxiliaries and with frequency adverbs, end position is common for manner, place, and time, and sentence initial placement is used for emphasis or to set the scene. The choice depends on the kind of adverb and the emphasis the speaker wants.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Main Clauses
A main clause can stand alone as a complete sentence, while a subordinate clause depends on another clause for full meaning. Subordinators such as because, when, and if introduce the dependent clause and show the relationship between the two parts. These clause links are essential for building longer statements and are important for Clauses.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Relative Clauses
Relative clauses add information about a noun by using who, which, or that. A defining relative clause identifies which person or thing is meant, while a non defining relative clause adds extra information about a noun that is already clear. Relative clauses are a major tool for expanding noun phrases in careful writing and speech.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Negation
Negation changes a statement into its negative form by adding not. When an auxiliary is already present, not follows that auxiliary directly. If there is no auxiliary, English uses do support to carry the negative marker, which is central to Negatives.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Questions
English questions usually change the declarative order by moving an auxiliary before the subject. Wh questions add a question word before that inverted auxiliary pattern, so the structure becomes wh word plus auxiliary plus subject plus verb. This pattern connects directly to Asking Questions and is also needed for Tag Questions.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Special Orders
English can change the usual clause order for emphasis, especially in clefts, fronting, and ellipsis. Clefting highlights one part of the sentence by separating it from the rest of the clause, fronting moves an element to the beginning, and ellipsis leaves out material that is understood from context. These patterns are more common in speech and literary style than in neutral statements and are useful for Punctuation and Interjections.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
Key Takeaways
English statements are built on a stable subject verb object pattern, with important alternatives such as intransitive, linking, ditransitive, and object complement structures. Modifiers have preferred positions, and longer clauses use subordination and relative clauses to add detail without losing clarity. Negation, questions, and special emphasis patterns all work by reshaping the same core sentence structure that supports clear English communication.