Your friend grabs the last slice of pizza. You open your phone, tap an app, and type "pizza." In two seconds, you've sent them a payment request.
The app's notification probably says You sent David $3[TRANS].
It doesn't say You sent $3 to David[TRANS].
Textbooks teach you that second version. It’s correct, but it’s not how the English brain works when things move fast. The first version is the native speaker’s shortcut. It’s a tiny piece of code that reveals a core principle of the language: the "giving" mindset.
This isn't just about give or send. It's a fundamental pattern for any verb that involves a transfer.
The structure is dead simple: Subject - Verb - Receiver - Thing.
You put the person who gets something immediately after the action. The object comes last. This word order feels like a direct hand-off. It’s clean, fast, and removes the need for extra words like to or for.
Could you pass me the remote?
The app showed me a really weird ad.
My brother made me a playlist.
I'll find you a good seat.
The "Receiver First" Mindset
This grammar isn't just about efficiency. It’s a social signal.
When you have a choice between I bought a coffee for my friend[TRANS] and I bought my friend a coffee[TRANS], you are choosing what to put in the spotlight.
The first sentence focuses on the coffee. The transaction is the main event. The friend is the destination, added at the end with for. It’s technically correct, but it feels distant, like you're describing a delivery.
The second sentence—the "Receiver First" pattern—focuses on the friend. It puts the human relationship at the center of the action. The coffee is just the detail. This structure feels warmer, more personal, and more connected. It implies the action was motivated by the person, not the object.
This is the unwritten rule. English speakers use this pattern constantly to signal that an action is personal. It's a way of saying, "This was for you." By placing the person before the thing, the grammar itself performs an act of generosity.
The Golden Rule: When an action is a gift, a favor, or a service for a specific person, put that person first, right after the verb. You'll sound less like you're reporting a transaction and more like you're describing a human connection.
View Comprehensive Vocabulary List
`She gave me her password.`[TRANS]
She gave me her password.
`I'll send you the file.`[TRANS]
I'll send you the file.
`He told me a secret.`[TRANS]
He told me a secret.
`Show me the photo.`[TRANS]
Show me the photo.
`Can you pass him the sugar?`[TRANS]
Can you pass him the sugar?
`My friend lent me his jacket.`[TRANS]
My friend lent me his jacket.
`She brought me a souvenir from her trip.`[TRANS]
She brought me a souvenir from her trip.
`He bought his mom flowers.`[TRANS]
He bought his mom flowers.
`I made them dinner.`[TRANS]
I made them dinner.
`She cooked us an amazing meal.`[TRANS]
She cooked us an amazing meal.
`Could you find me a cheap hotel?`[TRANS]
Could you find me a cheap hotel?
`I'll get you a drink.`[TRANS]
I'll get you a drink.
`The company offered her a job.`[TRANS]
The company offered her a job.
`He promised me he would call.`[TRANS]
He promised me he would call.
`He read the kids a story.`[TRANS]
He read the kids a story.
`She wrote me a long email.`[TRANS]
She wrote me a long email.
`He teaches us English.`[TRANS]
He teaches us English.