View example sentences and word forms for Grammarians.

Grammarians

Grammarians | Grammarian

Grammarians meaning

plural of grammarian

Example sentences (20)

Truganina Hornets will enter the competition against Old Camberwell Grammarians this weekend, while Laverton will host Chelsea, Barnstoneworth United will take on Kings Domain and Balmoral and Melbourne City will square off in an all-west affair.

Double negatives — commonly defined as a negative statement containing two negative elements — have long been abhorred by grammarians.

Grammarians Hockey Club enter today’s hockey knowing that they will already be playing in the crossovers this Sunday, with an opportunity for promotion.

My last column, which focused on headline and punctuation errors, stirred the grammarians among Blade readers from their favorite reading chairs to pen me a note or dash off an impassioned email.

Colish Medieval Foundations pp. 66–70 Grammarians of the period modified the Latin language, changing it from the Classical Latin of the Roman Empire into a more flexible form to fit the needs of the church and government.

Grammarians in SF tradition use system networks to map the available options in a language.

History hatnote Word classes (parts of speech) were described by Sanskrit grammarians from at least the 5th century BC.

However, modern grammarians recognize that words traditionally grouped together as adverbs serve a number of different functions.

Ibn Ezra gives a list of the oldest Hebrew grammarians in the introduction to his Moznayim (1140).

It is found grouped with the Prakrit languages, with which it shares some linguistic similarities, but was not considered a spoken language by the early grammarians because it was understood to have been purely a literary language.

Modern grammarians argue that this classification is artificial, citation and that Tamil usage is best understood if each suffix or combination of suffixes is seen as marking a separate case.

Most modern English grammarians no longer use the Latin accusative/dative model, though they tend to use the terms objective for oblique, subjective for nominative, and possessive for genitive (see Declension in English ).

Native grammarians classify Tamil phonemes into vowels, consonants, and a "secondary character", the āytam.

Nom–Gen–Dat–Acc–(Voc)-Abl–(Loc) This alternate sequence arose from Byzantine grammarians who were originally writing about Greek.

One of these was his De arte metrica, a discussion of the composition of Latin verse, drawing on previous grammarians work.

Other Prakrits include Gāndhārī and Paiśāci, which is known through grammarians' statements.

Prakrit grammarians would give the full grammar of Ardhamagadhi first, and then define the other grammars with relation to it.

Tamil grammarians of the time classified it as a dependent phoneme (or restricted phoneme citation ) ( cārpeḻuttu ), but it is very rare in modern Tamil.

The question of how to classify different cognomina led the grammarians of the fourth and fifth centuries to designate some of them as agnomina.

There is some disagreement among grammarians whether to view the distinction as a distinction in aspect, or tense, or both.