We do. The name of Q is "kybu".
I meant more distinctive names, as per the example I mentioned for Arabic ج
Yes, it is possible to say/write Lojban bridi in the such a way as to act like it's an SOV language. Or an OSV one, or a VSO one, or any other word order. But Lojban doesn't have /verbs/, so it would only be /appearing/ to be such-it wouldn't actually be.
I know Lojban's word is virtually unconstrained (or really, haven't reached that level yet). But I meant if it could act as a real SOV language, like Latin; without place tags or swithcers... eg. {zo'e zo'e zo'e rupnu} instead of {zo'e rupnu zo'e zo'e} or maybe {zo'e zo'e zo'e cu rupnu}?