I am also sure than reading grammatically repulsive and humour challenged paragraphs are not your idea of weekend fun. |
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A mantra is a kind of prayer that contains the name of God that is inflected grammatically in the dative case. |
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At school, we, the sons and daughters of European immigrants, were taught to write grammatically. |
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They speak fluently and grammatically but convey little meaning and cannot understand spoken or written language. |
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There are people who can no longer speak grammatically, even though they can comprehend others perfectly well. |
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Even when there were policy divisions these had been expressed grammatically. |
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There is sometimes an alternation between f and v in grammatically or etymologically related words. |
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I do not suffer fools gladly, especially not critics who can neither read accurately nor write grammatically. |
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Here the narrator creates a logical chain that is not only grammatically excessive but comically overexact. |
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However, that is just my gut reaction, I have no definitive grounds to rule you grammatically incorrect. |
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The hieroglyphic inscription, although carved with hesitancy, is grammatically proper Egyptian. |
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And although ubuntu can be grammatically classified as an abstract noun, it is often employed in relational contexts. |
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It is the quintessential use of the dative case, the dative of means, grammatically speaking. |
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It's been years since I actually tried to recall the precise rules of creating grammatically correct sentences. |
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The fragmentary nature of the reference here turns this statement grammatically into a question. |
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In fact, it has many Latin words that are not found in other Romance languages, and is more grammatically complex. |
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They have trouble pronouncing words properly, speaking grammatically and making certain fine movements of the lips and the tongue. |
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And more broadly, very few people can be relied on being constantly elegant, or even constantly grammatically correct, in extended extemporaneous commentary. |
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The ALC ENGLISH METHOD makes use of practical and conversational activities to teach a grammatically correct English. |
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The translation will be checked for translation accuracy as well as for grammatically and idiomatically correct language. |
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I can rewrite colleagues' texts that have not been written in their mother tongue, improving them grammatically and stylistically. |
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In the meantime, traditional Latin and the severe cursive style was also abandoned in favour of a grammatically correct text and standard handwriting. |
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General advice about writing grammatically and avoiding slang is fine. |
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And you also have to keep listening to yourself, so as to be sure that what you are saying makes sense and is grammatically correct. |
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It is precisely the grammatically incorrect term 'Patentconsult' which is not suitable. |
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Occasionally you will stumble across something in my Latin that is, almost accidentally, grammatically correct, but that is a rarity. |
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When a Francophone speaks English and is heavily accented and not grammatically correct, what do you do? |
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I keep trying, maybe one day I'll get the secret, until then you'll just have to put up with this poorly constructed, grammatically inept, syntax challenged journal. |
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Breaking the offending sentence into two sentences is grammatically correct but often rhythmically wrong. |
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That sentence may be grammatically correct, but it sounds awkward and doesn't make much sense at first glance. |
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The Bureau aspires to deliver texts that are faithfully translated, grammatically correct and at levels A and B of the SICAL standard. |
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A written application should be legible, grammatically correct, short and to the point. |
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My apologies if the tenses in the preceeding sentence are grammatically incorrect. |
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And, judging by the titles, they're not written by the most grammatically proficient users. |
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The messages are grammatically imperfect, if not incomplete. |
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Our Language Management System is designed to ensure that your texts are grammatically, orthographically and stylistically correct. |
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This eliminates the need for the speaker to analyse each sentence grammatically, yet deals with a situation effectively. |
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Common nouns are in turn divided into concrete and abstract nouns, and grammatically into count nouns and mass nouns. |
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Proper nouns, and all proper names, differ from common nouns grammatically. |
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Formal written standards remain grammatically close to each other, despite some minor syntactic differences. |
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Ed Miliband's effort to rebrand the Labour Party by purloining a phrase from 19th-century Conservatism was always hard to fathom, not least grammatically. |
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Roughly speaking, inflectional constructions can be defined as yielding sets of forms that are all grammatically distinct forms of single vocabulary items, whereas derivational constructions yield distinct vocabulary items. |
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The Australian English is grammatically based on the British English. |
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There is also the ability of the children of migrant workers to invent new languages known as creoles out of the grammatically incoherent pidgin spoken by their parents. |
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In doing so, we ensure that your text garners the attention it deserves. We achieve this by making sure that each text is grammatically correct, stylistically apt, and gets to the point efficiently. |
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Jo was a country girl, but very much up to the minute, single, with a couple of children, dually fathered, if that is grammatically possible, who brought her quite a tidy sum every week. |
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Especially associated with the Prague school of linguists prominent since the 1930s, the approach centres on how elements in various languages accomplish these functions, both grammatically and phonologically. |
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Structurally and grammatically, Gullah has much in common with the West African languages from which it is derived, but most of its vocabulary is English. |
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However, a breakthrough came when he realised that what he had been thinking of as different parts of speech were, in fact, grammatically the same. |
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Be careful, your sentence must be grammatically correct. |
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Between the ages of three and four, children's utterances become increasingly sophisticated and they begin to produce grammatically correct speech. |
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Besides being grammatically correct, language should be suitable. |
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Our job exchange provides a novelty: Your job vacancy which you will submit will be automatically translated by a new translation tool. It will translate grammatically correct into all available languages. |
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It is possible to construct grammatically valid and meaningful sentences which lack one or more of the three. |
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That is, gender can determine the inflection of other parts of speech which agree grammatically with a noun. |
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Noun phrases are phrases that function grammatically as nouns within sentences, for example as the subject or object of a verb. |
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The prohibitive mood, the negative imperative may be grammatically or morphologically different from the imperative mood in some languages. |
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On the other hand, it is possible for a sentence to be marked grammatically as a question, but to lack the characteristic question intonation. |
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He claims that speech is grammatically complex while writing is lexically dense. |
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Basically this means that, in such languages, saying 'my sister' is acceptable, but 'my land' would be grammatically incorrect. |
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Proper names based on noun phrases differ grammatically from common noun phrases. |
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Clitics do not always appear next to the word or phrase that they are associated with grammatically. |
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A string of words that can be replaced by a single pronoun without rendering the sentence grammatically unacceptable is a noun phrase. |
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It might seem that every grammatically complete sentence or clause must contain a finite verb. |
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Both of the sentences are acceptable and grammatically correct, but sentences with the copula are more formal. |
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Your work is grammatically correct, but you want something more than grammar. |
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One reason the poem above is so interesting is that it's so grammatically tortured. |
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The writing is grammatically correct, but it just doesn't flow. |
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For example, in Finnish, there are five different physical lengths, because stress is marked with length on both grammatically long and short vowels. |
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Consonants, too, can alternate in ways that are used grammatically. |
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This is a particularly useful exercise because human relations in the Jaqi languages are grammatically constructed on the basis of sexual and human equality. |
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This index has spelling variants of a lexeme grouped together under a single headword, but has grammatically different forms of a lexeme as separate headwords. |
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Six more possible antigrams are all grammatically unparallel words. |
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Use of who here is normal, and to replace it with whom would be grammatically incorrect, since the pronoun is the subject of was, not the object of say. |
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In English, for example, phrases such as would dare to, may be able to or should have to are sometimes used in conversation and are grammatically correct. |
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