grammarians in English

noun
1
a person who studies and writes about grammar.
The grammarians ' attitude toward language, combined with the mechanical instruction in grammar required by the texts, made the subject feared and despised by pupils and teachers alike.
noun
    syntactician

Use "grammarians" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "grammarians" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "grammarians", or refer to the context using the word "grammarians" in the English Dictionary.

1. ☞ Some grammarians extend the terms protasis and Apodosis to the

2. Grammarians are Agreed that contact clauses are a paratactic construction of two independent clauses

3. Adherent to something Prescriptive grammarians are seen as blind Adherents to outdated norms of formal usage.

4. Adjective Before the Noun An Adjective usually comes directly before the noun it describes (or "modifies," as grammarians say)

5. For example, "I feel Badly for him because he didn't make the cut." Most grammarians believe that this statement is incorrect

6. Most prescriptive grammarians prefer "I feel bad" to "I feel Badly", but "I feel Badly" is widely used.

7. The grammarians occasionally encountered apparent examples of such vocatives in the texts they taught, and they explained them either by invoking the figure of Antiptosis, in

8. (The words "confidant" and "Confidante" are interchangeable, but strict grammarians reserve "confidant" for males and "Confidante" for females.) He is most closest confidant

9. For particularly stringent grammarians of a certain generation, the rite of passage that marks the official start of adulthood is the point at which one becomes annoyed at hearing someone say that something is Awesome, …

10. – Julius Caesar To the delight of rhetoricians—and the dismay of grammarians—Caesar’s egocentric pronouncement made asyndeton (plural: Asyndeta) famous and has become the quintessential example of this mostly poetic figure of speech

11. In prescriptive grammar, Correctness is the notion that certain words, word forms, and syntactic structures meet the standards and conventions (that is, the "rules") prescribed by traditional grammarians. Contrast Correctness with grammatical error.

12. He also insisted on taking the accounts of ancient grammarians literally, for instance where they described vowels as being distinctively long and short, or the acute and circumflex accents as being clearly distinguished by pitch contours.

13. As in "The Advocation of making adjectives from verbs is a time-honored tradition practiced by Scots who advocate the coining of words in an effort to confuse grammarians in other English-speaking countries?" Or something to that effect.

14. When Aldus Manutius began his Greek impressions in 1495, he was one of his first collaborators with Marcus Musurus: he composed an epigram of four verses (called Thesaurus Cornucopiæ and horti Adonis) for a volume of Greek grammarians from the aldine presses in 1496.

15. Apheresis (n.) also Aphaeresis, "suppression of a letter or syllable at the beginning of a word," 1610s, from Latin Aphaeresis, a grammarians' use of Greek aphairesis "a taking away," from aphairein "to take away," from assimilated form of apo "from, off" (see apo-) …

16. 1.7, to translate -- sometime in the future -- passages from Plato and Aristotle.(2) We have four fragments by Roman grammarians from a work of Cicero's called Protagoras, which seems to be a rather accurate translation of Plato's Protagoras.(3) In addition, we have in the manuscript tradition a large fragment