Sentence examples for grammatical element from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Glossematics, system of linguistic analysis based on the distribution and interrelationship of glossemes, the smallest meaningful units of a language e.g., a word, a stem, a grammatical element, a word order, or an intonation.

However, she further claimed that the past temporal perspective is achieved without "any particular grammatical element" as a temporal shifter.

The phrasal forms, in contrast, where the grammatical element (article or pronoun) is not phonologically integrated with the stem in the same way as an inflectional suffix, evidently do not make the same demands on the system supporting dynamic segmentation.

Similar(57)

Another example brings out more clearly the difference between morphemes (the minimal grammatical elements) and lexemes (the minimal meaningful elements).

Grammatical elements of equal or closely related values in various languages are very often not related in sounds.

Influences on the choice of sounds, grammatical elements, and vocabulary items may include such factors as age, sex, education, occupation, race, and peer-group identification, among others.

In another system, kugyŏl, abridged versions of Chinese characters were used to denote grammatical elements and were inserted into texts during transcription.

Today's Hebrew contains vocabulary and grammatical elements from the language's biblical roots, said Dr. Alan Cooper, a professor of Bible who holds a joint appointment at Jewish Theological Seminary and Union Theological Seminary in New York.

This error, combined with the error of distinguishing between simple and ornate form, has prevented people from seeing that the philosophy of language is not a philosophical grammar, but is wholly devoid of grammatical elements.

In most everyday contexts the most widely spoken language is Tok Pisin ("Pidgin Language"; also called Melanesian Pidgin or Neo-Melanesian), a creole combining grammatical elements of indigenous languages, some German, and, increasingly, English.

We can see a hint of this in English, in the rules that dictate morphemes (the smallest grammatical elements, such as verb and noun endings, as well as so-called derivational suffixes, like "-ian," "-ism," and "-ity"), which explain why, for example, "Mendelismian" sounds awkward.

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