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syntactic
[ sin-tak-tik ]
adjective
- of or relating to syntax:
syntactic errors in English;
the syntactic rules for computer source code.
- consisting of or noting morphemes that are combined in the same order as they would be if they were separate words in a corresponding construction:
The word blackberry, which consists of an adjective followed by a noun, is a syntactic compound.
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 蝉测苍路迟补肠顎僼颈路肠补濒路濒测 adverb
- 苍辞苍顎却测苍路迟补肠顎僼颈肠 adjective
- 苍辞苍顎却测苍路迟补肠顎僼颈路肠补濒 adjective
- non顎叢醪獠月烦俨钩︻僼颈路肠补濒路濒测 adverb
- 耻苍顎却测苍路迟补肠顎僼颈肠 adjective
- 耻苍顎却测苍路迟补肠顎僼颈路肠补濒 adjective
- un顎叢醪獠月烦俨钩︻僼颈路肠补濒路濒测 adverb
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of syntactic1
Example Sentences
As oxymorons go, it鈥檚 the operatic equivalent to Noam Chomsky鈥檚 famous syntactic puzzle 鈥淐olorless green ideas sleep furiously.鈥
The lyrics, written by the still-anonymous Ghostwriter, are sophomoric, and the delivery inorganic, with paint-by-numbers metaphors and misogyny that veers away from the syntactic detail that gives both artists鈥 songs their uniquely incisive texture.
We talked about all sorts of things, and he loved it when I enthused about a simile or some syntactic tour de force.
And they agree that complex, conditional, coherent, syntactic, if-this-then-that language, with a plan B and a plan C, would have required a big brain.
There is a deep hunger that Sondheim satisfies, for intelligence and syntactic rigor in a form that in lesser hands comes across as pat and lazy.
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