< Georgian

Word order in Georgian is not very strict. One common sentence structure features the sequence subject-indirect object-direct object-verb. For example, the sentence "I am writing a letter to my mother" can be expressed as follows (the glosses use the abbreviations NOM = nominative case, DAT = dative case, PRES = present screeve):

Mededasts'erilsvts'er.
I-NOMmy mother-DATletter-DATwrite-PRES

The sentence could also occur with the constituent order subject-verb-direct object-indirect object. Since the verb encodes information about all the arguments, any of them can always be dropped (see pro-drop, null subject). It is common for pronoun arguments to be dropped.

This article is issued from Wikibooks. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.