| 释义 | 
		Definition of syntactic in English: syntacticadjective sɪnˈtaktɪksɪnˈtæktɪk Of or according to syntax.  Example sentencesExamples -  Pidgin grammars tend to be shallow, with no syntactic devices for subordination or embedding.
 -  Suppose you wanted to track changes in the relative usages of syntactic variants by writers in, oh say, the past three or four decades.
 -  Ironically, there was already a syntactic oddity in the quoted paragraph.
 -  In nearly all cases, different lexical items carry with them different syntactic as well as semantic structures.
 -  My first reaction was that the filler isn't analysable as having any particular syntactic function, since it can occur almost anywhere.
 -  These share some of the conceptual and syntactic properties of the singular mass nouns.
 -  Although agrammatic, all patients displayed sensitivity to, and use of, parallel syntactic principles in mathematics.
 -  In such grammars, conflicts among semantic and syntactic constraints are resolved in terms of ranking.
 -  This can involve echoing particular words, adopting features of pronunciation, using similar syntactic structures, and so on.
 -  It's possible that these writers have a different syntactic frame for the verb understate.
 -  Here's another case where it seems that a common syntactic pattern is a grammatical confusion.
 -  The main argument concerns the relationship between syntactic, textual, and ideological analysis, and the descriptive methods required in text analysis.
 -  These include word identification, syntactic parsing, and semantic composition of word meanings.
 -  This serves to highlight not only the lexical features associated with a particular field but also the syntactic features which characterize spoken French.
 -  A verb phrase is allowed to begin with anything it wants, subject only to the syntactic principles about the contents of verb phrases.
 -  It's a bit unexpected not to include any measures of syntactic complexity - even something as simple as mean sentence length.
 -  But it simply isn't reasonable to say that they are syntactic errors.
 -  If the sequence of written words falls naturally into a syntactic pattern that clashes with the intended meaning, reading goes wrong.
 -  Traditional theories of agreement production assume that verb agreement is an essentially syntactic process.
 -  As the main or only word in the noun phrase, it has the same set of syntactic functions as a noun.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century: from Greek suntaktikos, from suntassein 'arrange together' (see syntax). Rhymes   anaphylactic, ataractic, autodidactic, chiropractic, climactic, didactic, galactic, lactic, prophylactic, tactic    Definition of syntactic in US English: syntacticadjectivesɪnˈtæktɪksinˈtaktik Of or according to syntax.  Example sentencesExamples -  Ironically, there was already a syntactic oddity in the quoted paragraph.
 -  But it simply isn't reasonable to say that they are syntactic errors.
 -  This serves to highlight not only the lexical features associated with a particular field but also the syntactic features which characterize spoken French.
 -  These share some of the conceptual and syntactic properties of the singular mass nouns.
 -  It's a bit unexpected not to include any measures of syntactic complexity - even something as simple as mean sentence length.
 -  The main argument concerns the relationship between syntactic, textual, and ideological analysis, and the descriptive methods required in text analysis.
 -  Pidgin grammars tend to be shallow, with no syntactic devices for subordination or embedding.
 -  Traditional theories of agreement production assume that verb agreement is an essentially syntactic process.
 -  Suppose you wanted to track changes in the relative usages of syntactic variants by writers in, oh say, the past three or four decades.
 -  My first reaction was that the filler isn't analysable as having any particular syntactic function, since it can occur almost anywhere.
 -  If the sequence of written words falls naturally into a syntactic pattern that clashes with the intended meaning, reading goes wrong.
 -  It's possible that these writers have a different syntactic frame for the verb understate.
 -  These include word identification, syntactic parsing, and semantic composition of word meanings.
 -  Here's another case where it seems that a common syntactic pattern is a grammatical confusion.
 -  A verb phrase is allowed to begin with anything it wants, subject only to the syntactic principles about the contents of verb phrases.
 -  In nearly all cases, different lexical items carry with them different syntactic as well as semantic structures.
 -  Although agrammatic, all patients displayed sensitivity to, and use of, parallel syntactic principles in mathematics.
 -  In such grammars, conflicts among semantic and syntactic constraints are resolved in terms of ranking.
 -  This can involve echoing particular words, adopting features of pronunciation, using similar syntactic structures, and so on.
 -  As the main or only word in the noun phrase, it has the same set of syntactic functions as a noun.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century: from Greek suntaktikos, from suntassein ‘arrange together’ (see syntax).     |