On this page you'll find 10+ example sentences with Syntactic. Discover the meaning, synonyms such as syntactical or grammar and how to use the word correctly in a sentence.
Syntactic meaning
- Of, related to or connected with syntax.
- Containing morphemes that are combined in the same order as they would be if they were separate words e.g. greenfinch
Synonyms of Syntactic
Using Syntactic
- The main meaning on this page is: Of, related to or connected with syntax. | Containing morphemes that are combined in the same order as they would be if they were separate words e.g. greenfinch
- Useful related words include: syntactical, grammar.
- In the example corpus, syntactic often appears in combinations such as: the syntactic, of syntactic, syntactic structure.
Context around Syntactic
- Average sentence length in these examples: 26.1 words
- Position in the sentence: 9 start, 10 middle, 1 end
- Sentence types: 20 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Syntactic
- In this selection, "syntactic" usually appears in the middle of the sentence. The average example has 26.1 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, close, corresponding, given, structure, unit and unification stand out and add context to how "syntactic" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include a close syntactic unit really and a given syntactic unit determines. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "syntactic" sits close to words such as abeokuta, abstained and accenture, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with syntactic
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
All syntactic elements, including variables and basic operators, are defined as words. (12 words)
The distribution of a given syntactic unit determines the syntactic category to which it belongs. (15 words)
Another example of the syntactic approach is the Alternative Set Theory Vopěnka, P. Mathematics in the Alternative Set Theory. (19 words)
A function call or syntactic form is written as a list with the function or operator's name first, and the arguments following; for instance, a function f that takes three arguments would be called as (f arg1 arg2 arg3). (40 words)
A formal theory is syntactic in nature and is only meaningful when given a semantic component by applying it to some content (i.e. facts and relationships of the actual historical world as it is unfolding). (36 words)
Syntactic unification of first-order terms Schematic triangle diagram of syntactically unifying terms t 1 and t 2 by a substitution σ Syntactic unification of first-order terms is the most widely used unification framework. (35 words)
Example sentences (20)
A relatively recent (1998) development in the syntactic analysis of idioms departs from a constituent-based account of syntactic structure, preferring instead the catena -based account.
However, in modern colloquial English almost any adverb may be found in this syntactic position, especially when the adverb and the verb form a close syntactic unit (really-pull, not-split).
Similarly, many of the syntactic results in proof theory can be proved in PRA, which implies that there are primitive recursive functions that carry out the corresponding syntactic transformations of proofs.
Syntactic unification of first-order terms Schematic triangle diagram of syntactically unifying terms t 1 and t 2 by a substitution σ Syntactic unification of first-order terms is the most widely used unification framework.
The distribution of a given syntactic unit determines the syntactic category to which it belongs.
Typically the preprocessing phase occurs before syntactic or semantic analysis; e.g. in the case of C, the preprocessor manipulates lexical tokens rather than syntactic forms.
Rook serves as one of ' main threats, with the syntactic determined to bring back a sample of the black goo to Weyland-Yutani - no matter the human cost involved.
According to this theory, the most basic form of language is a set of syntactic rules that is universal for all humans and which underlies the grammars of all human languages.
A formal theory is syntactic in nature and is only meaningful when given a semantic component by applying it to some content (i.e. facts and relationships of the actual historical world as it is unfolding).
A function call or syntactic form is written as a list with the function or operator's name first, and the arguments following; for instance, a function f that takes three arguments would be called as (f arg1 arg2 arg3).
A key property of deductive systems is that they are purely syntactic, so that derivations can be verified without considering any interpretation.
All of these theories indicate a move towards a view that syntactic comprehension problems arise from a computational rather than a conceptual deficit.
All syntactic elements, including variables and basic operators, are defined as words.
Almost all of TeX's syntactic properties can be changed on the fly, which makes TeX input hard to parse by anything but TeX itself.
Although repeating and reading single words do not engage semantic and syntactic processing, they do require an operation linking phonemic sequences with motor gestures.
An alternative to syntactic salt is generating compiler warnings when there is high probability that the code is a result of a mistake – a practice common in modern C/C++ compilers.
Another example of the syntactic approach is the Alternative Set Theory Vopěnka, P. Mathematics in the Alternative Set Theory.
Any symbol or word which does not violate the syntactic rules of the language can be used as a metasyntactic variable.
Approaches to non-standard analysis There are two very different approaches to non-standard analysis: the semantic or model-theoretic approach and the syntactic approach.
Because an effective notation for the description of programs exhibits considerable syntactic structure, it is called a programming language.
Common combinations with syntactic
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts:
- the syntactic 21×
- of syntactic 12×
- syntactic structure 8×
- and syntactic 8×
- syntactic rules 7×
- syntactic sugar 7×
- as syntactic 6×
- is syntactic 4×
- purely syntactic 4×
- syntactic forms 3×