LingoStoriesLingoStories
🇪🇸A1

A1 Spanish GrammarBasic Word Order

Learn Spanish sentence structure and the flexible SVO (Subject-Verb-Object) word order. Understand how Spanish allows more flexibility than English and when different orders are used.

1Basic SVO Structure

Spanish typically follows Subject-Verb-Object order like English. However, because verb endings show the subject, Spanish allows more flexibility. The basic structure is still SVO for simple declarative sentences.

SVO Structure

SubjectVerbObject
Maríacomepizza
Yoleolibros
Los niñosjueganfútbol
Ellahablaespañol

Examples

Juan come una manzana.

Juan eats an apple.

standard SVO order

Yo estudio español.

I study Spanish.

SVO with pronoun subject

Mi hermana trabaja en Madrid.

My sister works in Madrid.

SVO with prepositional phrase

Los estudiantes leen el libro.

The students read the book.

plural SVO

2Flexible Word Order

Spanish allows different word orders for emphasis or style. VSO (verb-subject-object) is common in questions and emphatic statements. Object-first order emphasizes the object. This flexibility is natural in Spanish.

Word Order Variations

OrderExampleEffect
SVOJuan come pizzaneutral
VSOCome Juan pizzaemphasis on action
OVSPizza come Juanemphasis on object
VSLlegó Maríacommon with intransitive

Examples

Llegó el tren.

The train arrived.

VS - common with 'arrive'

Ese libro lo tengo yo.

That book, I have it.

object first for emphasis

Vino mi padre ayer.

My father came yesterday.

VS order natural here

A María le gusta el café.

María likes coffee.

special order with gustar

3Adjective Placement

Unlike English, Spanish adjectives usually come AFTER the noun. Some common adjectives (bueno, malo, grande, pequeño) can go before, sometimes with changed meaning. Position affects nuance.

Adjective Position

PositionExampleEnglish
after nounun coche rojoa red car
after noununa mujer inteligentean intelligent woman
before (common)una buena ideaa good idea
before (emphasis)un gran hombrea great man

Examples

Tengo un gato negro.

I have a black cat.

color after noun

Es una buena película.

It's a good movie.

bueno often before noun

Es un hombre grande. (big)

He is a big man.

after = literal size

Es un gran hombre. (great)

He is a great man.

before = figurative

4Questions and Negation

Questions in Spanish often use VS order or simply add ¿? marks with rising intonation. Negation uses no before the verb. Double negatives are correct and required in Spanish.

Question and Negation Patterns

TypePatternExample
yes/no question¿Verb + Subject?¿Hablas español?
statement as question¿SVO?¿Tú hablas español?
negationno + verbNo hablo español
double negativeno + verb + nada/nadieNo veo nada

Examples

¿Tienes hambre?

Are you hungry?

VS order in question

¿María viene hoy?

Is María coming today?

SV with question marks

No tengo tiempo.

I don't have time.

no before verb

No hay nadie aquí.

There's nobody here.

double negative required