Time Manner Place

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Linguistic typology
Morphological
Analytic
Synthetic
Fusional
Agglutinative
Polysynthetic
Morphosyntactic
Alignment
Nominative-accusative
Ergative-absolutive
Active-stative
Tripartite
Direct-inverse system
Syntactic pivot
Theta role
Word Order
VO languages
Agent Verb Object
Verb Agent Object
Verb Object Agent
OV languages
Agent Object Verb
Object Agent Verb
Object Verb Agent
Time Manner Place
Place Manner Time
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In linguistic typology, Time Manner Place states the general order of adpositional phrases in a language's sentences: "yesterday by car to the store". It is common among SOV languages. Japanese (which is SOV) and German (which is fundamentally SVO but uses SOV in certain circumstances) belong to this category. The other common order for adpositional phrases is Place Manner Time, which is exemplified by English and French.

An example in German is:

Ich fahre heute mit dem Auto nach München.
I drive today with the car to Munich.
I will drive to Munich by car today.

The temporal phrase heute (="today") comes first, the manner mit dem Auto (="by car") is second, and the place, nach München (="to Munich") is third.

(One way to remember the order in German is the mnemonic acronym ZAP: Zeit (time), Art (manner), Platz (place).) Another, in English, is the "acronym" TeMPo.

English and French only use this order when the time is mentioned before the verb, which is commonly the case when time, manner, and place are all mentioned: "Demain (time), je vais en auto (manner) jusqu'au magasin (place)", which means literally "Tomorrow, I go by car until the shop".

es:Tiempo Modo Lugar