Word Order
Learn Word Order in English and practice putting words in the right place in simple sentences, questions, and negatives.
Basic Order
English basic statements usually follow this order: subject, verb, object. The subject comes first, the verb comes next, and the object comes after the verb. This order is common in short simple sentences.
Adjectives
An adjective usually comes before a noun. It gives more information about the noun. In English, the adjective does not come after the noun in basic noun groups.
Adverbs
Adverbs can appear in different places in a sentence. Many adverbs of frequency come before the main verb. With the verb be, the adverb usually comes after be.
Be Order
With the verb be, the order in a statement is subject and be. A complement comes after be. The complement can be a noun, an adjective, or a place.
Yes No Questions
In yes or no questions, the auxiliary verb comes before the subject. The main verb usually comes after the subject. This change is called inversion.
Wh Questions
In wh- questions, the wh- word comes first. Then the auxiliary verb comes before the subject. After that, the main verb or the rest of the sentence follows.
Negative Order
In negative sentences, not comes after an auxiliary verb or after be. In simple present and simple past with other verbs, do or did carries not. The main verb stays after not in its base form when do or did is used.
What You Can Do
You can now place common sentence parts in the correct order in simple English. You can build basic statements with subject, verb, and object. You can also place adjectives, adverbs, be, question words, auxiliaries, and not in the correct positions.