grammars in English

noun
1
the whole system and structure of a language or of languages in general, usually taken as consisting of syntax and morphology (including inflections) and sometimes also phonology and semantics.
To analyse language and to define language disorders most linguists divide language into four domains: phonology, grammar , semantics, and pragmatics.
synonyms:syntaxsentence structurerules of languagemorphologylinguistics
noun

Use "grammars" in a sentence

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

1. LR-attributed grammars are a special type of attribute grammars.

2. Finite State Grammars Although finite state grammars are weak they have been used in computational systems.

3. As a result, attribute evaluation in LR-attributed grammars can be incorporated conveniently in bottom-up parsing. zyacc is based on LR-attributed grammars.

4. They are a superset of the S-attributed grammars, which allow only synthesized attributes.

5. Alternatively, you may be confronted with several pedagogical grammars in the same language.

6. Attributed grammars are both used for formal definitions of static properties of programming languages and for compiler specification.

7. 12 The alleged deficiency is compensated for by a neurologically based preference for Chomskian grammars.

8. Attribute grammars can also be used to translate the syntax tree directly into code for some specific machine, or into some intermediate language.

9. They are a variant of LR-attributed grammars where an equivalence relation on inherited attributes is used to optimize attribute evaluation.

10. Idioms reserve some special grammars used in ancient Chinese such as word flexible use, anastrophe and ellipsis which are different from modern Chinese.

11. A relative clause functions Adjectivally, but it isn’t an adjective (although in some grammars it’s called an adjective clause)

12. Layering in structural-functional grammars Instantly, the nine-bedroom country house, set in immaculately main tained grounds, impressed, the former Victorian team Agnate 's stone building

13. OPTRAN is based on attributed transformational grammars, but extends these to achieve more compact descriptions, more efficient transformers, and an adequate cooperation of several transformation passes.

14. An Approximative case with the marker -lan exists both in the Beserman dialect and, at least according to grammars, in literary Udmurt (see more on that in 3.3).

15. Charters and records show their secrets to the philologist and their quota of words and inflections form a large part of our dictionaries and grammars.

16. They are a subset of the L-attributed grammars, where the attributes can be evaluated in one left-to-right traversal of the abstract syntax tree.

17. In the proposed approach, attributed graph grammars are used to extract the information on form features, which represent the geometric description of manufacturing features, from B-rep.

18. One strength of attribute grammars is that they can transport information from anywhere in the abstract syntax tree to anywhere else, in a controlled and formal way.

19. Inflection Grammatical inflection (sometimes known as Accidence or flection in more traditional grammars) is the way in which a word is changed or altered in form in order to achieve a new, specific meaning

20. Grammatical inflection (sometimes known as Accidence or flection in more traditional grammars) is the way in which a word is changed or altered in form in order to achieve a new, specific meaning

21. Anaphores, cohésion et mouvements textuels (2016) Han yu fang yan chong die shi bi jiao yan jiu (2016) Nouvelles perspectives sur l'anaphore (2014) Theoretical and experimental aspects of syntax-discourse interface in heritage grammars (2014) Informationsstruktur und

22. Translations in context of "Convulses" in English-Italian from Reverso Context: From Interventionist Demonstration by Carrà, to Merzbild by Schwitters, and Pharmacy by Cornell, to the new grammars of a similar language in the 50s by Rotella and Spoerri, the printed word structures and defines images but with a resonance that Convulses the visual syntax.