The article seeks to initiate a discussion about the order analysis of the constituents of the Guajajara and Asuriní languages of the Xingu, which as indigenous languages show different characteristics of Portuguese.In the thematization of this problem the idea is to verify if the Brazilian indigenous languages follow the standards previously delimited by Greenberg referring to the order of the constituents of the standard sentence.From the linguistic typology, our objective in proposing this research theme is to relate the order of the constituents of the sentence presented by the languages with the universal universals of Greenberg, which are widely discussed and applied to several languages, as well as to analyze if the orders observed in the languages corroborate these universals or diverge and how they diverge.For this, we use here the cut made by Pereira's doctoral thesis (2009), as well as the studies done on the indigenous languages of Duarte ( 2007) and the formalist approach of Greenberg (1963).And since it is a finished research, we can observe that from the few data obtained from the language the Universals still prove valid from the analysis developed in the article referring to it, reaffirming that indigenous languages are necessary for an understanding of the larger world from the linguistic.