Word for "english-like syntax" [closed]
Solution 1:
"The syntax of [many] high-level programming languages uses Subject-Verb-Object, an english-like ordering. Pascal, C, C++, Java, and many other programming languages are SVO."
Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) ordering looks like, "X += Y". This is English's predominant form.
Conversely, many assembler variants use Verb-Subject-Object (VSO) as in, "ADD R1, R3". (One reason that C is an "efficient" language is that the SVO example can directly compile to the VSO.)
Note that high-level stack languages like Postscript and Forth use SOV: "X, Y, ADD".
More here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_typology#Subject–verb–object_positioning