Grammatically
in sentence
8 examples of Grammatically in a sentence
So even though the machine-to-machine conversation can make sense,
grammatically
and colloquially, it can still end up feeling cold and robotic.
So while it might be
grammatically
correct and uses all the right hashtags and emojis, it can end up sounding mechanical and, well, a little creepy.
So for example, if I'm speaking in English, I have to speak
grammatically
differently if I'm talking about past rain, "It rained yesterday," current rain, "It is raining now," or future rain, "It will rain tomorrow."
And what that means is that every time you discuss the future, or any kind of a future event,
grammatically
you're forced to cleave that from the present and treat it as if it's something viscerally different.
Was your sentence actually
grammatically
incorrect?
11-year-olds cannot do simple addition, they cannot construct a
grammatically
correct sentence.
The famous Sufi master Rumi, who is very well known to most of you, has a story in which he talks of a man who goes to the house of a friend, and he knocks on the door, and a voice answers, "Who's there?" "It's me," or, more
grammatically
correctly, "It is I," as we might say in English.
By contrast, within months of uttering their first words, two-year-old children can produce complex,
grammatically
correct, and topically diverse sentences comprising verbs, nouns, prepositions, and determiners.
Related words
Correct
Sentence
Might
Future
Yesterday
Words
Within
While
Which
Voice
Viscerally
Verbs
Uttering
Treat
Topically
Tomorrow
There
Their
Talks
Talking