fixed word order造句
例句与造句
- Q'anjob'al has a fixed word order.
- Inflected languages without a fixed word order include Latin, Polish, and Greek.
- Some languages have no fixed word order.
- Fixed word order is typical in Mansi.
- However, some languages use a fixed word order, even if they provide a degree of marking that would support free word order.
- It's difficult to find fixed word order in a sentence. 用fixed word order造句挺难的
- In such a system, fixed word order is not necessary to determine meaning ( although highly inflected languages do sometimes develop normative word orders ).
- The fixed word order of English allows for relatively few discontinuities compared to, for instance, the Slavic languages, which are much more permissive.
- Milewski's typology can be employed to analyze languages with case marking but can also be used with those that use a fixed word order or a specific form of incorporation.
- Aleut inflectional morphology is greatly reduced from the system that must have been present in Proto-Eskimo Aleut, and where the Eskimo languages mark a verb's arguments morphologically, Aleut relies more heavily on a fixed word order.
- The latter, which classifies languages according to whether the head precedes or follows its complement, shows a roughly 50-50 split : in languages that have a fixed word order, about half have a Head-Complement order, and half have a Complement-Head order.
- In addition, some languages allow subjects to follow verbs : either optionally for stylistic reasons, as in Irish, where subjects " precede " the verb only for stylistic reasons; or even as a mandatory requirement, in languages with V-S-O or V-O-S word order and a strongly fixed word order.