WORD

Word
A meaningful unit of language,
"It is an arrangement of alphabets that has a meaning"

There is only two things which have meaning, one is name and another is act.  Name refer to noun and act is referred to verb.

And the modifier for both of them which changes the meaning of both it is adjective for noun and adverbs for verb.

When we put words into the order then it refers to the way words are arranged in a sentence.
The general word order in English is: 
Subject + Verb + Object
(Which means that the Subject comes before the Verb, which comes before the Object.)

 To determine the proper sequence of words, you need to understand what the subject, verb and object(s) are.

Subject: a noun or pronoun—the person, place, thing or idea
Verb: an action, an occurrence, or a state of being
Object: the word or group of words influenced by the verb

The sequence of words is critical when communicating in English because it can impact the meaning of what you’re trying to say. The sentence, “The Dog crossed the line” and “The line crossed the dog” take on two different meanings because the subject and object are inverted. The same would be true if the verb was used out of order, for example: “Crossed the line the dog.”

Think you’ve got the hang of it? See if you can organize the English learning

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