|
Definition of Syntax language
1. Noun. A language used to describe the syntax of another language.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Syntax Language
Literary usage of Syntax language
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Teaching the Language-arts: Speech, Reading, Composition by Burke Aaron Hinsdale (1896)
"Something should be said of the correction of false syntax. Language is so largely
a matter of imitation that it is folly to set persons who are forming ..."
2. Teaching the Language-arts: Speech, Reading, Composition by Burke Aaron Hinsdale (1898)
"Something should be said of the correction of false syntax. Language is so largely
a matter of imitation that it is folly to set persons who are forming ..."
3. Teaching the Language-arts: Speech, Reading, Composition by Burke Aaron Hinsdale, Mrs. Sarah E. Tarney-Campbell (1897)
"Something should be said of the correction of false syntax. Language is so largely
a matter of imitation that it is folly to set persons who are forming ..."
4. Calcutta Review by University of Calcutta (1844)
"... Phonology, Morphology and Syntax, Language undergoes evolutionary changes due
to the geographical position, climatic change, different environments, ..."
5. Mental Development in the Child by William T. Preyer (1893)
"Even after the child has gradually learned to decline and conjugate, and is
beginning to master syntax, language serves him rather for the expression of his ..."
6. A Short Manual of Comparative Philology for Classical Students by Peter Giles (1895)
"In the original Indo-Germanic Greek syntax, language there existed an ablative
case, which indicated the starting-point of the action denoted by the verb. ..."