Similar words: programming, teammate, summary, program, dilemma, commander, summation, drama. Meaning: ['græmə(r)] n. the branch of linguistics that deals with syntax and morphology (and sometimes also deals with semantics or morphology).
Random good picture Not show
31. She talked to the pupil about his grammar mistakes.
32. They have had English grammar hammered into them.
33. The leaflet includes several examples of bad grammar.
34. This is the best German grammar I've seen.
35. He has a good grasp of German grammar.
36. The class is well grounded in grammar.
37. The man was asking, grammar wavering.
38. Your grammar is not quite up to the mark.
39. Each entry in this dictionary has a grammar code.
40. She speaks quite fluently but she's weak on grammar.
41. He spent much time correcting my grammar.
42. Beginners are too apt to make mistakes in grammar.
43. He elucidated a point of grammar.
44. We're being tested on grammar tomorrow.
45. She grounded her students in grammar.
46. She was marked down because of poor grammar.
47. French grammar was drubbed into our heads.
48. His vocabulary was sound and his grammar excellent.
49. The grammar guide falls between two stools - it's too difficult for a beginner but not detailed enough for an advanced student.
50. A dictionary lists the words, a grammar states the rules.
51. The best students were creamed off by the grammar schools.
52. The totality of English grammar is too great to be studied in detail.
53. This time the teacher will not mark our English exercises for spelling and grammar, but she will be looking for pleasing expression.
54. Credit will be given in the exam for good spelling and grammar.
55. There are always a lot of exceptions to grammar rules.
56. This book will give your students a firm grasp of English grammar.
57. His books on grammar are a shining light in a very difficult and confused field.
58. He knows his Latin grammar indifferently,[http://sentencedict.com/grammar.html] and cannot construe easily.
59. Some people regard grammar as an immutable set of rules.
60. In grammar, an adjunct is an adverb or adverbial phrase that gives extra information in a sentence.