Use "grammarian|grammarians" in a sentence

1. I love being the grammarian.

2. Caesar is not above the grammarian.

3. More than one grammarian have treated this subject.

4. My partner, Kay Lindhorst, was a real grammarian.

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

6. The Danish grammarian Jespersen first proposed the idea in 18

7. Aelfric, Abbot of Eynsham Called the "Grammarian" ( c

8. One way we learn this is through the role of grammarian.

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

10. All this was emblematic, meant as a memory aid for the budding grammarian.

11. He is a grammarian, a swordsman, a musician with a predilection for the fugue.

12. The famous grammarian Henry Fowler had a term for them: false scents. Sentencedict.com

13. For example, Henri could have concluded with, 'that's what it's used for, you stupid grammarian.

14. The rights of nation and of king sink into question of if grammarian discuss them .

15. A grammarian knows, or is at least supposed to know ( all about ) grammar.

16. 29 But the grammarian is tongue-tied without his labels: noun, adjective, verb, adverb, conjunction, pronoun.

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 Adherent to something Prescriptive grammarians are seen as blind Adherents to outdated norms of formal usage.

18. The rights of nation and of king sink into question of grammar if grammarian them .

19. But the grammarian is tongue-tied without his labels: noun, adjective, verb, adverb, conjunction, pronoun.

20. 28 But the grammarian is tongue-tied without his labels: noun, adjective, verb, adverb, conjunction, pronoun.

21. Similarly, the sentence-grammarian can not remain immured from the discourse he encounters in his daily life.

22. Indian grammarian. His Ashtadhyayi, one of the first works of descriptive linguistics, presents grammatical rules for Sanskrit.

23. It is also typically the case that the grammarian will have constructed the sentence or sentences he uses as examples.

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

25. Alexander Aetolus (Ancient Greek: Ἀλέξανδρος ὁ Αἰτωλός) was a Greek poet and grammarian, the only known representative of Aetolian poetry

26. Greek grammarian who taught at Rhodes and Rome and wrote an influential synthesis of Greek grammar, the Art of Grammar.

27. Alexander Aetolus (Ancient Greek: Ἀλέξανδρος ὁ Αἰτωλός) was a Greek poet and grammarian, the only known representative of Aetolian poetry

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

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

30. Too often, when the vice president education announces the open roles for an upcoming meeting, the job of grammarian remains available.

31. Although it seemed natural to use an apostrophe in the possessive plural, authorities, such as the grammarian Robert Lowth, argued against this.

32. 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

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

34. 120 BC), Greek rhetorician of Alabanda in Caria Apollonius the Sophist , grammarian who lived towards the end of the 1st century, and wrote a renowned Homeric lexicon

35. If you're a grammarian, consider it a verb, though saying that someone "romanced" someone else sounds about as stilted and antiquated as hearing that someone went "a-wooing.

36. 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, …

37. – 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

38. I am not sure which of them, the names of the bones or the sutras of the grammarian, were the more jaw-breaking. I think the latter took the palm.

39. 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.

40. 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.

41. 217 bc —died 145 bc, Cyprus), Greek critic and grammarian, noted for his contribution to Homeric studies. Aristarchus settled in Alexandria, where he was a pupil of Aristophanes of Byzantium, and, c

42. Finally, just as the General Evaluator is getting ready to introduce the grammarian, I highlight in my notes three or four of what I considered to be the best, worst or funniest linguistic feats.

43. 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.

44. 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.

45. 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-) …

46. 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

47. Phrynichus Arabius, (flourished 2nd century ad, Bithynia, Asia Minor [now in Turkey]), grammarian and rhetorician who produced Sophistike paraskeue (“A Grounding in Sophistic”), of which a few fragments and a summary by Photius survive, and an Attikistes, extant in an abridged form, called the Ekloge (“Selected Atticisms”)

48. Aristarchus ( *)Ari/starxos), the most celebrated GRAMMARIAN and critic in all antiquity, was a native of Samothrace.He was educated at Alexandria, in the school of Aristophanes of Byzantium, and afterwards founded himself a grammatical and critical school, which flourished for a long time at Alexandria, and subsequently at Rome also.

49. Critic (n.) formerly Critick, 1580s, "one who passes judgment, person skilled in judging merit in some particular class of things," from French critique (14c.), from Latin Criticus "a judge, a censor, an estimator," also "grammarian who detects spurious passages in literary work," from Greek kritikos "able to make judgments," from krinein "to separate, decide" (from PIE root *krei-"to sieve