Nomnom

This will be a stack-based language from now on. I promise.

This language is called Shift.

Part 1 - This is a Prepositional, Noun-Adjective VSO Language
The grammar of Shift is stack-based, but from an extremely broad point of view, it's like a VSO language with prepositions. The verb comes first, then the subject, then the object.

Fith, another stack-based language, has a word order which is almost exactly the opposite of this. This is because it uses an order reminiscent of Forth, which uses reverse Polish order. As the name suggests, this is the reverse version of Polish word order, which this language uses.

English: The man sees the egg.

Spanish: El hombre mira el huevo. (Lit. The man sees the egg.)

Fith: X ke Y ke V. (Lit: man the egg the see.)

Shift: shkovl long nun negz tonh vlitp nun blarg. (Lit: See belong the person SET man the egg.)

END