WORD ORDER AND PHRASE STRUCTURE IN ENGLISH AND UZBEK: A COMPARATIVE SYNTACTIC ANALYSIS

Auteurs

  • Mukhlisa Abdullaeva Автор

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17490875

Résumé

This paper presents a comparative analysis of word order and phrase structure in English and Uzbek, two languages representing distinct typological systems. English, as a fixed word order and analytic language, follows the Subject–Verb–Object (SVO) pattern, while Uzbek, an agglutinative and synthetic language, exhibits a flexible but predominantly Subject–Object–Verb (SOV) order. The study aims to identify structural similarities and differences in syntactic organization and to analyze how these features reflect broader linguistic principles within each system. The findings demonstrate that while English relies heavily on syntactic position for meaning, Uzbek depends more on morphological markers and postpositional structures. This contrast highlights fundamental differences in how both languages encode grammatical relations and manage syntactic hierarchy. 

 

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Publiée

2025-10-31

Comment citer

Abdullaeva, M. (2025). WORD ORDER AND PHRASE STRUCTURE IN ENGLISH AND UZBEK: A COMPARATIVE SYNTACTIC ANALYSIS. International Conference on Science, Education & Law, 1(1), 546-548. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17490875