Unlike many other languages that rely on word endings or particles to indicate roles, English relies almost entirely on word order. If you mess up the order, the meaning completely changes!
In English, the actor comes first (Subject), followed by the action (Verb), and then the target of the action (Object).
In some languages, you can say 'Apple I eat' and it makes perfect sense. In English, saying 'The apple eats me' literally means you are about to be eaten by a fruit!
Click the words in the correct order to form 'John likes apples very much'.
Let's check your understanding!
Historically, Old English (spoken before 1066) was heavily inflected, meaning words changed their endings depending on their role in the sentence, just like Latin or modern Russian. Because of this, word order was much freer! But over centuries, English lost its endings and had to adopt a strict SVO word order to make sense.