PALABRAS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADAS CON «GRAMMATICALNESS»
grammaticalness
linguistics
grammar
structural
rules
governing
composition
clauses
phrases
words
given
natural
language
term
refers
also
study
such
this
field
includes
morphology
syntax
phonology
often
complemented
phonetics
semantics
pragmatics
grammaticalness
wiktionary
lawrence
marks
judgments
some
sentences
semi
american
journal
psychology
reverso
meaning
grammatical
grammatically
grammarless
grammarian
wordreference
ɡrəˈmætɪkəl
relating
sentence
well
formed
regarded
correct
acceptable
native
speakers
defined
adjective
according
conforming
origin
late
latin
grammaticalis
from
classical
useful
comparison
here
with
problem
describing
sense
that
have
collins
always
jstor
fluent
these
ratings
order
generate
scales
position
arabic
many
other
translations
partial
replication
extension
maclay
sleator
involving
effort
define
there
appear
least
distinct
ways
assign
levels
10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «GRAMMATICALNESS»
Descubre el uso de
grammaticalness en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
grammaticalness y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
Noam Chomsky and Language Descriptions
The degree of grammaticalness is a measure of the remoteness of an utterance
from the generated set of perfectly well-formed sentences, and the common
representing category sequence will indicate in what respects the utterance in ...
John Ole Askedal, Ian G. Roberts, Tomonori Matsushita, 2010
2
Aspects of the Theory of Syntax
The sentences of (2) are low on the scale of acceptability but high on the scale of
grammaticalness, in the technical sense of this term. That is, the generative rules
of the language assign an interpretation to them in exactly the way in which ...
3
Studies in Descriptive and Historical Linguistics: ...
or partially grammatical, this respectively indicated that the test sentoid was an
adverb-particle, a verb-particle, or in some degree an adverb- or verb-particle,
the particular degree being directly proportional to the degree of
grammaticalness or ...
4
Knowledge and Language: Selected Essays of L. Jonathan Cohen
Paper 2 (On a Concept of Degree of Grammaticalness [1965]) has two main aims
: first, to distinguish degree of grammaticalness (a concept emerging from
discussions of generative grammar) from relative intelligibility; secondly, to
explain the ...
L. Jonathan Cohen, James Logue, 2002
5
Linguistic Theory: The Discourse of Fundamental Works
To simplify the task, a distinction is drawn between 'grammaticalness' in '
competence' versus 'acceptability' in 'performance' (AT 11) (cf. 7.12). Sentences
may be 'high' on one 'scale' and 'low' on the other. 'Grammaticalness is only one
of ...
Robert de 8eaugrande, 2014
6
Operators and Nucleus: A Contribution to the Theory of Grammar
3.2 Standards of grammaticalness and deviance It follows from 1.4.4 tnat the
second requirement, descriptive adequacy, incorporates two distinct but closely
related requirements : the grammar must distinguish grammatical from ...
Pieter A. M. Seuren, 2010
7
Esperanto, Interlinguistics, and Planned Language
Similar remarks apply to grammaticalness. Nobody speaks for the sake of
producing well-formed sentences in accordance with the grammar, no matter
how "ingrained" this may be; neither do we listen to what could sound like
perfectly ...
8
The Empirical Base of Linguistics: Grammaticality Judgments ...
The notion "acceptable" is not to be confused with "grammatical." Acceptability is
a concept that belongs to the study of performance, whereas grammaticalness
belongs to the study of competence. . . . Like acceptability, grammaticalness is, ...
9
Imagery and Verbal Processes
The above studies involved essentially dichotomous scaling of degree of
grammaticalness. Coleman (1965) used a form of generative grammar to
generate a four-level scale of grammaticalness. Level I was generated by
randomly drawing ...
10
Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language
While Quine emphasizes translation, a parallel case can be made for Chomsky's
favorite notions, that is, for synonymy and for grammaticalness. In Aspects of the
Theory of Syntax, Chomsky proposes that the linguist study grammaticalness ...
Peter A. French, Theodore Edward Uehling, Howard K. Wettstein, 1979