For those that didn't learn a little German at school, in German the verb is at the end of the sentence, not between the subject and object. Yes, German is RPN
Eh, no. The verb is between the subject and object unless there is a tense or additional verb in the same sentence.
McBryce.
Jepp. Example: "bd139 verlötet Molexstecker."
bd139 <-- subject
verlötet <-- verb
Molexstecker <-- object.
Another example: "med6753 benutzt UPN."
Same pattern as above.
Hope, this was helpful.
Afaik German is classified as a 2V word order language, i.e., the finite verb comes in second place in main clauses. The infinite verb is placed at the end. In subordinate clauses the finite verb is placed after the infinite verb.
Z. B.: Ich
habe Deutsch
gelernt, weil ich mit BU508A
reden will.
Translation word for word: I have German learned, because I with BU508A to talk want.
In red are the finite verbs. In black, the infinite ones.
In main clauses where you only have a finite
untrennbares verb, however, it sounds like a typical SVO (Subject-Verb-Object) language like English, French, etc., as you showed.
By the way, I don't speak German. So don't quote me on that.
P.S: BD139 solders the Molex connector.