Word Order
English Word Order: Sentence Structure and Syntax. Learn how to correctly arrange words in English sentences, including standard and inverted structures.
Basic Order
The basic word order in English is Subject-Verb-Object. The subject comes first, the verb comes second, and the object or complement comes third. Modifiers and extra information usually come after the object or at the end of the sentence. This order forms the core of statements in English.
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Questions
English questions often use auxiliary verbs to create inversion. In yes-no questions, the auxiliary or modal moves before the subject. In wh- questions, the question word comes first, followed by the auxiliary, then the subject and the main verb. Subject questions do not invert because the question word is the subject.
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Negation
Negation in English uses do, does, or did with not to form negative sentences. The auxiliary carries the negation and comes before the main verb. In negatives with be and modals, not follows the auxiliary or the verb be. The basic order remains, with the subject before the auxiliary and the rest of the sentence after the main verb.
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Adverbs
Adverbs can appear in several positions, but English prefers certain placements for clarity. Many adverbs of frequency come before the main verb and after be. Adverbs of manner usually come after the object or at the end. Adverbs of time and place often come at the end of the sentence.
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Compound Sentences
Compound sentences join two clauses with a coordinator such as and, but, or so. Each clause keeps Subject-Verb-Object order. The coordinator connects the clauses without changing their internal order. Punctuation or connectors do not invert the subject and verb in standard compound sentences.
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Inversion
Inversion moves the verb or auxiliary before the subject in specific contexts. Common contexts include questions, sentences starting with negative expressions, and conditionals without if. In these cases, inversion signals a special structure, but most statements do not use inversion.
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