treat (fast english)
Word Order Practice
Listen to each sentence and arrange the words in the correct order. Click on words to move them to your answer area.
Green checkmark (✓) means your current word order is correct so far. Red X (✗) means there's an error in the order.
Why Word Order Matters in English
Word order is crucial in English because it affects meaning. Unlike some languages that use case endings or particles to show word relationships, English relies heavily on word order to convey meaning.
This exercise helps you:
- Internalize English sentence patterns
- Recognize how natural speed speech fit into sentences
- Develop a natural feel for correct English structure
- Improve both listening and grammar simultaneously
1
0
/16
has
as
a
he
doctor
ability
doctor
a
think
Andrew's
a
special
likes
but
to
he
Andrew's
a
doctor
but
he
likes
to
think
he
has
a
special
ability
as
a
doctor
2
0
/8
patient
He
an
equal
as
can
a
treat
He
can
treat
a
patient
as
an
equal
3
0
/14
treat
patient
a
as
doctors
cool
patient
Most
distance
and
a
there
is
a
Most
doctors
treat
a
patient
as
a
patient
and
there
is
a
cool
distance
4
0
/8
treats
treat
But
illnesses
doesn't
people
Andrew
he
But
Andrew
doesn't
treat
illnesses
he
treats
people
5
0
/22
equally
of
hard
any
regardless
their
income
he
sees
He
people
really
factors
all
jobs
or
to
the
tries
treat
or
other
He
really
tries
hard
to
treat
equally
all
the
people
he
sees
regardless
of
their
jobs
or
income
or
any
other
factors
6
0
/22
them
as
treat
you
should
depression
you
you
infections
still
are
people
a
treat
so
treating
or
to
person
If
you
talk
If
you
treat
depression
or
you
treat
infections
you
are
still
treating
a
person
so
you
should
talk
to
them
as
people
7
0
/18
patients
it
they
Andrew
lot
sense
of
A
can
treat
of
great
his
respect
and
this
with
because
A
lot
of
his
patients
can
sense
it
and
they
treat
Andrew
with
great
respect
because
of
this
8
0
/5
a
like
him
lot
They
They
like
him
a
lot
Tips for Effective Practice
- Always listen to the audio first before attempting to order the words
- Pay attention to common patterns like subject-verb-object
- Notice how natural speed speech are positioned in sentences
- If you make a mistake, use it as a learning opportunity - try to understand why the correct order is different
- After completing each sentence, listen to the audio again while reading your correctly ordered sentence