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sujetoobjetoverbo

Sujetoobjetoverbo is a term used in linguistic typology to denote the canonical word order of a clause in which the subject appears first, followed by the object, and the verb comes at the end. The name is a portmanteau built from the Spanish words sujeto (subject), objeto (object), and verbo (verb), and it is sometimes employed informally to emphasize the SOV (subject–object–verb) pattern.

Characteristics associated with sujetobjetoverbo languages include a head-final structure where the verb typically remains at the

Numerous real-world languages are canonical SOV languages and are often described as sujetobjetoverbo in typological discussions.

The term sujetobjetoverbo is primarily a descriptive label used in linguistic pedagogy and typology rather than

end
of
the
clause,
extensive
case
or
postposition
systems
marking
grammatical
roles,
and
adjectives
or
modifiers
frequently
preceding
the
nouns
they
describe.
In
many
such
languages,
subordinate
clauses
and
relative
clauses
also
display
head-final
tendencies,
and
verbs
may
carry
rich
inflectional
morphology
or
auxiliary
sequences
signaling
tense,
aspect,
mood,
and
agreement.
Object
pronouns
and
other
clitics
may
attach
to
the
verb,
reflecting
a
tendency
toward
verb-final
syntax.
Prominent
examples
include
Turkish,
Japanese,
Korean,
Persian
(Farsi),
and
many
major
Indo-Aryan
languages
such
as
Hindi-Urdu.
While
these
languages
share
the
overall
SOV
order,
individual
varieties
may
allow
limited
word-order
variation
for
focus,
discourse,
or
question
formation,
and
some
may
employ
optional
prepositions
in
certain
constructions.
a
strict,
universally
adopted
category.
It
helps
contrast
SOV
languages
with
SVO
and
VSO
languages
and
highlights
the
structural
features
that
accompany
verb-final
syntax.