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Alternative terms
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Lexicographical Neighbors of
Literary usage of
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Gymnasium, Sive Symbola Critica: Intended to Assist the Classical Student in by Alexander Crombie (1834)
"... the noun being syntactically independent on any word in the sentence, the
Latin case, in which it is put, is called, therefore, the ablative absolute. ..."
2. The Journal of Philology by William George Clark, William Aldis Wright, Ingram Bywater, John Eyton Bickersteth Mayor, Henry Jackson (1876)
"... it is possible quo circa is a causal ablative followed by a preposition
expressing the same idea, but syntactically independent 'for which along of it': ..."
3. A Treatise on the Authorship of Ecclesiastes: To which is Added a by David Johnston (1880)
"These facts he groups together in verses 1-8, so constructing the verses as to
make them syntactically independent of one another. ..."
4. Transition in the Attic Orators by Robert Dale Elliott (1919)
"This chapter is a study of certain verbs of essentially incomplete meaning which,
by being parenthetically introduced into syntactically independent ..."
5. Gymnasium, Sive Symbola Critica: Intended to Assist the Classical Student in by Alexander Crombie (1834)
"... the noun being syntactically independent on any word in the sentence, the
Latin case, in which it is put, is called, therefore, the ablative absolute. ..."
6. The Journal of Philology by William George Clark, William Aldis Wright, Ingram Bywater, John Eyton Bickersteth Mayor, Henry Jackson (1876)
"... it is possible quo circa is a causal ablative followed by a preposition
expressing the same idea, but syntactically independent 'for which along of it': ..."
7. A Treatise on the Authorship of Ecclesiastes: To which is Added a by David Johnston (1880)
"These facts he groups together in verses 1-8, so constructing the verses as to
make them syntactically independent of one another. ..."
8. Transition in the Attic Orators by Robert Dale Elliott (1919)
"This chapter is a study of certain verbs of essentially incomplete meaning which,
by being parenthetically introduced into syntactically independent ..."