Study of the order of the syntactic constituents of a language, and how different languages can employ different orders.
1Neither do they possess syntactical rules of word order or sentence structure.
2Change word order and a sentence useless for anyone Yoda except you have.
3Sentences are disordered, word order reinvented, words themselves created new.
4Was word order similarly unimportant when writing in Heptapod B?
5But if you mess with that word order in the slightest you'll sound like a maniac.
6Klingon has a really unusual word order.
7Others need help with word order.
8You don't actually change the word order, you don't add another word in High Valyrian, you just change the intonation.
9Otherwise no one will trust U.S. companies with their data. (This story fixes word order in first paragraph)
10Otherwise the usage of other cultures in their word order for personal names is respected, so Mao Zedong appears thus.
11After you decide on your basic word order for basic sentences, then you have to move on to other types of sentences.
12Yet by means of small subtleties of variation in pause, word order, long and short syllables, Gray always saves the poem from monotony.
13Fraser Rea on the leading Gurkha Land Rover Defender, while at the same time another radioman mouthed a coded one- word order into his microphone.
14The English way of marking a question, by changing word order, is used in only 1.4% of languages.
15Carson tries to translate nothing which is not in the Greek, and to follow the original word order and line breaks as far as possible.
16This effect was found to be mediated by the intrinsic motivation for action and moderated by the salience of the word order of the primes.
Translations for word order