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Example sentences for "syntactical"

Lexicographically close words:
synovia; synovial; synovitis; syns; syntactic; syntax; syntheses; synthesis; synthesise; synthesised
  1. From the syntactical point of view, however, the Greek system is much superior to the Aryan, which has converted its perfect into a past tense in classical Sanskrit, and to a large extent lost grip of the moods.

  2. The high development and syntactical use of demonstratives which characterize the Kwakiutl are not found among the Californian tongues.

  3. For this syntactical reason, as well as for mechanical reasons arising from accent (q.

  4. The medium has developed a syntactical structure apart from any intrinsic significance thereby accruing to its elements.

  5. So the forms of perception and the categories of thought, which a grammarian's philosophy might think primordial necessities, are no less casual than words or their syntactical order.

  6. According to cause or significance, accents are commonly classed in three groups: Etymological or Word Accent, Syntactical or Rhetorical Accent, and Metrical Accent.

  7. The Cesura is a pause not counted out of the regular time of the rhythm, but corresponding to the pauses between "phrases" in music, and nearly always coinciding with syntactical or rhetorical divisions of the sentence.

  8. It coincides less closely than the cesura with syntactical and rhetorical pauses.

  9. Less generally, the rhetorical or syntactical accent in the same way takes precedence of the metrical.

  10. The syntactical or structural form peculiar to any language; the genius or cast of a language.

  11. The arrangement and connection of words in a sentence; syntactical arrangement.

  12. Syntactical change of form of words, as by declension or conjugation; inflection.

  13. A syntactical relation between words, as when one depends on another and is regulated by it in respect to case or mood; government.

  14. Footnotes [1]See Appendix A for syntactical definition.

  15. In the case of a syntactical error, a message will appear in the program listing one or several lines below the error.

  16. See Appendix A for syntactical definition.

  17. It is possible for a single syntactical error to cause more than one diagnostic.

  18. A few syntactical errors are corrected by the compiler, and a message is put out to this effect.

  19. Again marginal additions or corrections, which have been the means of destroying the syntactical connection, seemed to have been placed in the text by the author.

  20. As long, therefore, as a penetrating insight into syntactical structure is considered desirable, so long will Latin offer the best field for obtaining it.

  21. Two general principles may be laid down: (1) If the syntactical value of the two accented syllables of the hemistich is not equal, then the word which has the stronger accent of the two is chosen to alliterate.

  22. The two poems are of the same period, and in both the etymological and syntactical accentuation of natural speech forms the basis of the rhythmic accentuation.

  23. First comes what may be called the syntactical accent, which marks the logical importance of a word in relation to other words of the sentence.

  24. The cause of this variation in the force of the two beats is to be sought in the laws of the syntactical accent.

  25. It naturally happens that this syllabic accent coincides very often with the syntactical accent, as the syntactical stress must be laid on the syllable which has the etymological accent.

  26. To these belong certain compound nouns formed by two words of almost the same weight from a syntactical and metrical point of view, as e.

  27. Each hemistich must have two syllables which predominate over the rest in virtue of their logical and syntactical importance and have on this account a stronger stress.

  28. To assign the different hemistichs of a poem to these various types we have to follow as a regulating principle the natural word accent and syntactical accent of each sentence.

  29. The function of the syntactical collocation is to express the connexion of the cloth with the action of being; the connexion of the red colour (with the cloth) on the other hand is denoted by the word 'red' only.

  30. A syntactical relation between words, as when one depends on another and is regulated by it in respect to case or mood; government.

  31. Defn: Syntactical change of form of words, as by declension or conjugation; inflection.

  32. Evidently the instruction of mental calculation brought no results, and the syntactical difficulty, which consists in unravelling a question that is improperly put, has remained the same as ever.

  33. And it is this syntactical difficulty, which the children overcome by long and difficult exercises, that gives the teacher cause to think that, teaching the children what they know already, he is teaching them anything at all.

  34. Again the old Perevlevski's grammar, which begins with philosophical definitions and then with syntactical analysis, serves as the basis of all new grammatical exercises and of Mr. Bunakov's manual.

  35. Hiatus is preferable when there is a close syntactical connection between the vowel before the accent and the accented vowel, as, e.

  36. Express the syntactical relations by flexion.

  37. The instrumental, locative and dative are mixed in one case, partly for phonetic, partly for syntactical reasons.

  38. These grammatical and syntactical tendencies are beyond the scope of Thornton's investigation, but it is plain that they must be prime concerns of any future student who essays to get at the inner spirit of the language.

  39. Welsh, too, has certain syntactical features which enable it often to reproduce the Greek order more faithfully than English can do.

  40. Though himself concerned more immediately with the euphonic relations [Page 47] of words, he is fully alive to the phenomena of their syntactical relations.

  41. There are metrical and above all syntactical grounds {38} which have led most scholars to place Beowulf very early[79].

  42. Somewhat more definite results can be drawn from certain syntactical usages.

  43. Do the syntactical dependances and connexions of words depend on their original import?

  44. Bullions, in copying from Lennie's syntactical exercises a dozen consecutive lines, has omitted nine needful commas, which Lennie had been careful to insert!

  45. Commonly an ingenious mind may invent some better expression, and yet avoid any syntactical anomaly.

  46. Example: "Other tendencies will be noticed in the Etymological and Syntactical part.

  47. What Murray calls "Syntactical Parsing" is sometimes called "Construing," especially by those who will have Parsing to be nothing more than an etymological exercise.

  48. Parsing merely indicates the parts of speech and their accidents, but construing searches for and points out their syntactical relations.

  49. The reference of words to other words, or their syntactical relation according to the sense, should never be left doubtful, by any one who means to be understood.

  50. The syntactical order is this: "I shall neither deny nor attempt to palliate the atrocious crime of being a young man.

  51. This is a better reading than one joining, in such intimate syntactical relations, things so unlike as 'corpse' and 'jewels.

  52. From syntactical and other considerations, this is a most excellent emendation.

  53. The attempt to advance them more rapidly in the syntactical forms of Latin than is possible in their mother-tongue is a waste of time; and, besides, their inclination to study is put to a very severe test.

  54. They could easily have proved that much of the mystical charm which differences poetry from prose resides in its license, its syntactical acrobatics, its affectations of diction, its elisions, its rhymes.

  55. But syntactical unity cannot be established unless it be on the ground of there being a want of a complementary part of speech or sentence.

  56. For in general any minor syntactical unity, which is included in a more comprehensive syntactical unity conveying a certain meaning, does not possess the power of expressing a separate meaning of its own.

  57. The words of the sentence prohibiting the drinking of wine form only one whole, and on that account the separate sense which any minor syntactical unity included in the bigger sentence may possess cannot be accepted.

  58. We by no means assume a question in excess of the number of boons granted, being prevented from doing so by the influence of the opening part of that syntactical whole which constitutes the Ka/th/avallĂ®-upanishad.

  59. There is a syntactical likeness between these two, but none in vocabulary; where the Japanese vocabulary came from, Omniscience perhaps may know.


  60. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "syntactical" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.