syntactical

ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to or conforming to the rules of syntax
    the syntactic rules of a language
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How To Use syntactical In A Sentence

  • Now, though, it appears that the music industry is setting out to make amends for its many syntactical sins. Times, Sunday Times
  • In secondary school and junior college, I did pretty well at English, despite having little to no theoretical understanding of the syntactical aspects of the language.
  • It is a set of conventions for representing the syntactical organisation of a written text and also for representing the variation in vocal pitch and rhythm appropriate to a spoken performance of the text … It shows how a piece of writing should ‘go’ in a spoken performance. Barriers to Reading Comprehension « Literacy Articles « Articles « Literacy News
  • I'm sure that I could never have written such a neat bit of syntactical plotting.
  • Logophoric pronouns are semantically stronger than regular pronouns in that syntactically, they usually require to be bound in a local domain, and semantically, they are canonically referentially dependent.
  • If the syntactical principles that inform its decoration are linked to those seen on cups and amphoras, does that imply that it functioned in similar ways and also was used in similar contexts?
  • She also imposes tactful punctuation on the poems, a not inconsiderable achievement given the syntactical difficulties they sometimes pose. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The computer system could be programmed to require that Lana produce complete syntactically ordered strings of lexigrams arranged according to certain simple combinatorial rules.
  • Thus no syntactically correct program in our restricted version occam can contain an execution error.
  • Note the semeiotics, if you will: English uses alphabetical characters, uniform and mechanical, meaningless in themselves, meaningful only when combined in words; Japanese uses ideographs, scripted and lyrical, meaningful in themselves but sometimes also conveying a higher meaning when combined together; the square-code language uses geometric designs, intentionally mechanical, yet undeniably aesthetic, meaningful in themselves but presumably not combined syntactically (from item to item) in commerce. Probing the Psyche of the Information Age: Repella.net (A Digital Art Website Review)
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