Sentence examples for syntactic instances from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

The schema is essentially a recipe for generating syntactic instances.

Similar(59)

Some of these images can be gratingly obvious conflations of commerce and redemption, as in "Save"; others succeed by virtue of their syntactic failings, for instance, "Everything is Not $1".

These verb stems may further change their form according to syntactic environment; for instance, the grade-2 verb yànkáa 'to cut piece off' occurs in four different "forms" (usually referred to as A-, B-, C-, anD-formsms) depending on whether and which type of an object follows.

This includes, for instance, syntactic edges and other features that are not presently required.

For instance, syntactic conditions in the form of limit relations and ceteris paribus assumptions have the function of explaining why the reduced theory works where it does and fails where it does not (Glymour 1969).

On the other hand, results of brain imaging and behavioral studies have often demonstrated shared or similar resources underlying, for instance, syntactic and harmonic processing [10] [14], auditory working memory for both linguistic and musical stimuli [15], and semantic or semiotic priming [16] [21].

For instance, syntactic deficits in adults with primary progressive aphasia has been attributed to damage to the superior longitudinal fasciculus (Wilson, Galantucci, Tartaglia, & Gorno-Tempini, 2012).

Future research should also investigate whether other types of prediction based, for instance, on syntactic or pragmatic information also implicate the cerebellum.

We give equivalent syntactic definition of the type-instance, presented as a set of inference rules.

Specifically, given two events in an instance, and the associated syntactic parse tree T, we retain as our subtree the portion of T that covers (i) all the nodes lying on the shortest path between the two entities and (ii) all the immediate children of these nodes that are not the leaves of T. This subtree is known as a 'simple expansion tree', and was first used by Yang et al.

These phrases were syntactically ambiguous between different syntactic roles.

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