different between grammatical vs relativizer
grammatical
English
Etymology
From Middle French grammatical, from Latin grammatic?lis.
Pronunciation
- enPR: gr?m?t'?k?l, IPA(key): /????mæt?k?l/
Adjective
grammatical (comparative more grammatical, superlative most grammatical)
- Not breaching any constraints of the grammar, or morpho-syntax, of the relevant language.
- Your writing is not grammatical enough for publication.
- Of or pertaining to grammar.
- The writing was measured for both grammatical complexity and accuracy factors.
Synonyms
- grammatic
Antonyms
- (acceptable): ungrammatical
Derived terms
Translations
French
Etymology
From Middle French grammatical, from Latin grammatic?lis.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??a.ma.ti.kal/
Adjective
grammatical (feminine singular grammaticale, masculine plural grammaticaux, feminine plural grammaticales)
- grammatical
Antonyms
- agrammatical
Derived terms
- grammaticalement
- mot grammatical
Related terms
- grammaire
Further reading
- “grammatical” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Norman
Adjective
grammatical m
- Alternative form of granmatical
grammatical From the web:
- what grammatical structure is repeated in the passage
- what grammatical structure is repeated in this excerpt
- what grammatical structure is the italicized portion of the sentence
- what grammatical term is his
- what grammatical mood makes an exclamation
- what grammatical feature are the words in fact
- what grammatical term is 'the'
- what grammatical form is lugete
relativizer
English
Etymology
From relativize +? -er.
Noun
relativizer (plural relativizers)
- Someone or something that relativizes.
- (linguistics) A grammatical element used to indicate a relative clause.
Translations
See also
- relative pronoun
Further reading
- relativizer on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- revitalizer
relativizer From the web:
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