'Object Verb Subject' (OVS) or 'Object Verb Agent' (OVA) is one of the
permutations of expression used in
linguistic typology. OVS denotes the sequence '
Object Verb Subject' in unmarked expressions: ''Oranges ate Sam'', ''Thorns have roses''. While these sentences remain grammatically correct in English, unlike those written in
Agent Object Verb, their meaning is lost in the absence of case-marked pronouns: ''Oranges ate I''. While the
passive voice in English may appear to be in the OVS order, this is not an accurate description. In an active voice sentence, for example ''Sam ate the oranges,'' the grammatical subject, ''Sam'' is the '
agent', who is acting on the '
patient,' ''the oranges,'' which are the object of the verb ''ate''. In the passive voice, ''The oranges were eaten by Sam,'' the order is reversed so that patient is followed by verb, followed by agent. However, ''the oranges'' become the subject of the verb ''were eaten'' which is modified by the prepositional phrase ''by Sam'' which expresses the agent, maintaining the usual Subject Verb (Object) order. OVS sentences in English ''can'' be parsed when pronouns mark the case (''Him like I.'') But such a sentence is clearly nonstandard. This sort of reversed order can also be used in English when relating an adjective to a noun (i.e. "cold is Alaska"), although here ''cold'' is a
predicative adjective, not an object.
OVS is a class of languages used in the classification of languages according to the dominant
sequence of these
constituents. In this case the sequence of the constituents is Object Verb Subject. This sequence is the rarest of the six possible orderings of Subject, Verb, and Object. Examples of human languages that use it include
Guarijio,
Hixkaryana, and to some extent also
Tapirapé.
Although not dominant, this sequence is also possible when the object is stressed in languages that have relatively free word order due to case marking.
Romanian,
Basque,
Esperanto,
Hungarian,
Finnish and, to some extent,
German are examples. Some languages, such as
Swedish, which normally lack any extensive case marking, allow such structures when
pronouns (which are marked for case) are involved.
The Object Verb Subject sequence also occurs in
Interlingua, although the makes no mention of it excepting passive voice. Thomas Breinstrup, editor in chief of
Panorama in Interlingua, sometimes uses the sequence in articles written for Panorama.
This sequence was chosen for the
artificial language Klingon, a language spoken by the
extraterrestrial Klingon race in the fictional universe of the
Star Trek series, in order to make the language sound deliberately alien and counterintuitive. Thus, Klingon uses the rarest permutation of expression, which is expected given the designers' goals.
See also
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Word order in Latin
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Subject Object Verb
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Subject Verb Object
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Object Subject Verb
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Verb Object Subject
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Verb Subject Object