Word order in Latin Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Latin differs from languages like English in that it uses many noun cases which are declined in such a way that they are nearly all different from each other, and even proper nouns such as names are declined.For example, the ending of the common Roman name Marcus is different in each of the following sentences due to the different cases in which it is used (the name Cornelia remains undeclined):
- Marcus hits Cornelia. (Subject-Verb-Object, the most common permutation of expression in English)
- Cornelia hits Marcum. (SVO)
- Cornelia gives Marco a present. (Subject, Verb, [indirect object], [direct] Object, so SVO as well.)
- Cornelia shouts: "Marce, Marce, come! It's time for your difficult language homework." (SVO)
The ordering in the following sentences would be perfectly correct in Latin and no doubt understood with clarity, despite the fact that in English they're awkward at best and senseless at worst:
- Cornelia hits Marcus. (OVS, as in Klingon)
- But which means: Marcus hits Cornelia.
- Marcum hits Cornelia. (OVS)
- But which means: Cornelia hits Marcum.
- Marcum Cornelia hits. (OSV)
- But which means: Cornelia hits Marcum.
- Marco gives Cornelia a present. ([indirect object], Verb, Subject, [direct] Object, so VSO)
- But which means: Cornelia gives Marco a present.
- But which means: Cornelia gives Marco a present.
It is possible to construct a poem with a completely regular rhythm of stressed and unstressed syllables through careful arrangement of the right words in the right order, a feat rendered virtually impossible in English. An example of this form of poetry is the dactylic hexameter.
Many Slavic languages, such as Russian and Polish—though not Bulgarian—also have many noun cases, making variable word order possible as in Latin.
