grammatic


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Synonyms for grammatic

of or pertaining to grammar

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
As noted, Finnish is an agglutinative language with complex words in which morphemes are strung together, each with a single grammatic or semantic meaning.
(2003) Test of Language Picture Vocabulary Development--Primary Relational Vocabulary (TOLD-P:3) Oral Vocabulary Newcomer & Hamill Grammatic Understanding (1988) Sentence Imitation Grammatic Completion Word Discrimination Phonemic Analysis Word Articulation Implied function of test items (a) Verbal Test and author(s) Sub-test name or description Echoic Clinical Evaluation of Concepts & Following Language Fundamentals Directions Ages 5-8 (CELF-4) Word Structure Semel et al.
My Paris, my last published novel, is written mostly in present participles; the erasure of active verbs almost cruelly reduces the subject, rendered small and porous by grammatic incision, the better to absorb the maximum of the moment, shot through with multiple shards of urban sounds and tropes.
57 -This revisited version of Agamben's work contains an extra-paragraph called: "The birth of grammatic" which is added between two existing paragraphs of the adopted English version: "Infancy and language" and, "Nature and culture, or the double inheritance" pp.
(22) This Yiddishizing adaptation of the name Jolson has a ring of Yiddish plausibility to it: it echoes the grammatic construct and sounds of the adjectives farkhalesht, farhungert, farklempt.
But yes, that was her genius and she had the strength of mind to tell him so: "Myself the only Kangaroo among the Beauty." To herself she said, "Tell all the Truth but tell it slant." In idiosyncrasy--omission, truncation, disjunction, opacity, illogic, semantic and syntactic and grammatic and prosodic and punctuational oddness and ambiguity--hers was the hummingbird's Route of Evanescence.
Was die Grammatic seye/ undt wie viele Theyle oder Stucke sie habe.
The house was once home to Henry Salesbury, whose Grammatic a Britannica, published in 1593, some scholars believe marked the emergence of modern Welsh.
Founded in 1495 as a 'Grammatic Academy', the University of Santiago de Compostela is one of the oldest in Europe, playing an important part in the cultural life of Galicia and Spain.
On the rim there are oval panels depicting the Seven Liberal Arts and their patron Minerva: GRAMMATIC (Grammar), DIALECTICA (dialect), RHETORICA (rhetoric), MUSICA (music), ARITHMETIQUA (Arithmetic), GEOMETRIA (Geometry) and ASTROLOGIA (Astrology).
We found neither program help nor the manual to be particularly enlightening or grammatic.
We believe that Baseball's command to "hunt for more strikes" stemmed more from grammatic inefficiency than arrogance.
Grammatic understanding (GU) assesses the ability to comprehend sentences having differing syntactic structures.
Moreover, similaic catachresis as represented by these two early modern rhetoricians is defined as an "abuse" of that synecdochic signifier for female sexuality--its non-sanctioned "use" or participation in sexual intercourse that involves a woman's transgression of the boundaries of the patriarchal household, and thus the very disregard for economic, erotic and grammatic "proper(ty)" that Irigaray identifies as a characteristic of proxematic parler femme (This Sex 79).