Published November 14, 2025 | Version v1
Conference paper Open

SYNTACTIC ECONOMY IN ENGLISH AND UZBEK: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF WORD ORDER AND SENTENCE STRUCTURE

  • 1. Student of Uzbek National Pedagogical University
  • 2. Uzbek National Pedagogical University Department of the Theory and Methodology of English

Description

This study investigates syntactic economy in English and Uzbek, focusing on word order and sentence structure. Syntactic economy describes a language’s strategy to minimize structural complexity while preserving clarity and communicative effectiveness. English, as an analytic language, relies on a rigid word order and function words to signal grammatical relations, whereas Uzbek, an agglutinative and morphologically rich language, encodes grammatical roles through suffixes and flexible word placement. Despite typological differences, both languages employ economy-driven strategies to ensure efficient and comprehensible communication. Insights from this comparison contribute to understanding linguistic typology, translation practice, and second-language pedagogy

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References

  • 1. Comrie, B. (1981). Language Universals and Linguistic Typology: Syntax and Morphology (p. 43). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.