Abstract
Most linguists suggest that all languages have some universal principles, even though a significant number of languages worldwide appear to have nothing in common at first glance. These guidelines comprise an established body of rules known as a Universal Grammar. It is true that the way sentences are formed in Hungarian, an agglutinative language, and Farsi, a fusional language that is modern Persian, appears to have very little, if anything, in common. It's also true that Italian verbs have six conjugations, while Chinese verbs have none (they are inflected for number, tense, etc.). Nonetheless, it is evident that all four of these languages use verbs and follow a similar pattern of sentence construction.
References
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Oyxunboeva Dilafruz Mahmud qizi, Davronova Dilnoza Jasur qizi, Abduraxmanova Zilola Yoqubjon qizi Ilmiy maqolasi uchun "CONFERENCE ON UNIVERSAL SCIENCE RESEARCH 2023(CUSR)"
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