Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Lao is generally a subject–verb–object language, although the object can come at the beginning of a sentence for emphasis. Despite lacking agreement and case marking, word order is very free, and predicate-argument relations are determined largely through context. Lao is a right branching language, much like other languages of Southeast Asia and, to a lesser extent, the Romance languages."@en }
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- Lao_grammar abstract "Lao is generally a subject–verb–object language, although the object can come at the beginning of a sentence for emphasis. Despite lacking agreement and case marking, word order is very free, and predicate-argument relations are determined largely through context. Lao is a right branching language, much like other languages of Southeast Asia and, to a lesser extent, the Romance languages.".
- Q6487828 abstract "Lao is generally a subject–verb–object language, although the object can come at the beginning of a sentence for emphasis. Despite lacking agreement and case marking, word order is very free, and predicate-argument relations are determined largely through context. Lao is a right branching language, much like other languages of Southeast Asia and, to a lesser extent, the Romance languages.".
- Lao_grammar comment "Lao is generally a subject–verb–object language, although the object can come at the beginning of a sentence for emphasis. Despite lacking agreement and case marking, word order is very free, and predicate-argument relations are determined largely through context. Lao is a right branching language, much like other languages of Southeast Asia and, to a lesser extent, the Romance languages.".
- Q6487828 comment "Lao is generally a subject–verb–object language, although the object can come at the beginning of a sentence for emphasis. Despite lacking agreement and case marking, word order is very free, and predicate-argument relations are determined largely through context. Lao is a right branching language, much like other languages of Southeast Asia and, to a lesser extent, the Romance languages.".