syntactically ill-formed. From Wordnet, Princeton University.
Adjective : The word blackberry. From Dictionary.com.
Stretched and stilted, but arguably syntactically correct. From Wordnik.com. [The Volokh Conspiracy » Legal Gambits] Reference
Which is syntactically equivalent to "Make-believe good-er.". From Wordnik.com. [SciFi Changes Its Name to "SyFy"] Reference
H2O is a syntactically correct chemical name, but 2Zz is not. From Wordnik.com. [How To Think Like a Computer Scientist, Learning with Python]
Even though syntactically it works like a report of an event. From Wordnik.com. [Rush Limbaugh accuses Obama of tearing his words out of their original parody context to stir up racial fears.] Reference
They is syntactically plural, as seen in the conjugation of bring. From Wordnik.com. [2009 September « Motivated Grammar] Reference
I said, "Yes," to assure him that his response wasn't syntactically confusing. From Wordnik.com. [Alexandra Dufour: Campaign Journal: Lights Out at McCain Office in Central PA] Reference
If one is going to use a Latin phrase, it should at least be syntactically correct. From Wordnik.com. [Weird Collections of Letters — Slaw] Reference
Chris Quinones @226: I always feel so smart when I deduce2 the answer syntactically.1. From Wordnik.com. [Making Light: Open thread 137] Reference
LeÅniewski formulated his procedural directives purely syntactically and completely. From Wordnik.com. [Lvov-Warsaw School] Reference
If we can, the complex expression is grammatical, well-formed, or syntactically connected. From Wordnik.com. [StanisÅaw LeÅniewski] Reference
Such "syntactically ambiguous" sentences form a crucial test case for any theory of syntax. From Wordnik.com. [A Special Supplement: Chomsky's Revolution in Linguistics] Reference
˜Îµ ™ is syntactically connected as follows: writing the category of an expression e as. From Wordnik.com. [StanisÅaw LeÅniewski] Reference
My family is syntactically singular in American English, as seen in the conjugation of stops. From Wordnik.com. [2009 September « Motivated Grammar] Reference
And I think that stylistically bad sentences are far more common than syntactically bad ones. From Wordnik.com. [It’s not The Elements of Grammar « Motivated Grammar] Reference
Tarski put it once again into the center of modern logic, both semantically and syntactically. From Wordnik.com. [Propositional Consequence Relations and Algebraic Logic] Reference
I think you can see that the Spanish-speakers actually used more syntactically correct language. From Wordnik.com. [Question of word order] Reference
The wording on the sign really is all over the place, syntactically, semantically and otherwise. From Wordnik.com. [Your cooperation in reading this blog post is requested] Reference
I must confess that this massively long, run-on 73 word sentence leaves me syntactically confused. From Wordnik.com. [Students Organize Media Reform Group, Make Plans to Send Group to NCMR] Reference
The Starbucks can be seen in the background of this syntactically very complicated charity boast sign. From Wordnik.com. [A late afternoon coffee break.] Reference
Similar effects have been found with syntactically ambiguous sentences e.g., "Time flies like an arrow". From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2004-12-01] Reference
To summarise, GDI defines information, broadly understood, as syntactically well-formed and meaningful data. From Wordnik.com. [Semantic Conceptions of Information] Reference
What if a student writes a poem which is structurally and syntactically perfect but says nothing of interest?. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2007-01-01] Reference
As usual in logic, these languages are the basis for semantically as well as syntactically founded systems of logic. From Wordnik.com. [Many-Valued Logic] Reference
Quotation-mark names may be treated like single words of a language, and thus like syntactically simple expressions. From Wordnik.com. [Quotation] Reference
There's a "Flowers for Algernon" vibe in that the worm's speech starts off syntactically challenged but gets better. From Wordnik.com. [REVIEW: The Year's Best Science Fiction #19 edited by Gardner Dozois] Reference
First is the syntactically redundant linguistic pattern hosa ¦ panta, variants of which are common in this treatise. From Wordnik.com. [Aristotle's Biology] Reference
On such accounts, syntactically plural reference is semantically singular; there is a sense of ˜singular™ in which. From Wordnik.com. [Jamestown] Reference
However, this would make the overall explanation less syntactically simple, and hence less virtuous in other respects. From Wordnik.com. [Simplicity] Reference
Though the sentences are syntactically different, phrase structure rules alone would give them similar phrase markers. From Wordnik.com. [A Special Supplement: Chomsky's Revolution in Linguistics] Reference
And there probably will be diminished political mileage in portraying the president as a syntactically challenged bumpkin. From Wordnik.com. [War, The Health Of The State] Reference
Now, differing voices are not different; they unintentionally, syntactically, construct global meaning they are unaware slaves. From Wordnik.com. [COLLAPSIBLE POETICS THEATER by RODRIGO TOSCANO] Reference
Although Einstein's special theory of relativity goes over, syntactically, to classical mechanics in the limit of low velocities. From Wordnik.com. [Scientific Revolutions] Reference
In such a system each sentence confers a syntactically specified degree of support on each of the other sentences of the language. From Wordnik.com. [Inductive Logic] Reference
On the plus side, the party had abandoned its previous slogan: the syntactically challenged “Together, America Can Do Better.”. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2006-07-01] Reference
They think that it is possible for connectionist representations to be syntactically structured in some sense without being classical. From Wordnik.com. [The Language of Thought Hypothesis] Reference
To suggest the subtle pervasiveness of her aura, mention of its spread is carried in turn lexically and syntactically as well as phonetically. From Wordnik.com. [Phonemanography: Romantic to Victorian] Reference
“Ruinous” also echoes “ravenous,” a transferred epithet that is disconcerting syntactically, just as the loss of Philip is existentially. From Wordnik.com. [A Close Read] Reference
In grammar, a reflexive verb is a verb whose semantic agent and patient (typically represented syntactically by the subject and the direct object) are the same. From Wordnik.com. [Page 2] Reference
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