as boring as
The grammar terms for "as boring as" are a comparative adjective and an adverbial phrase. "As" is a comparative conjunction used to compare the degree of two things, and "boring" is the comparative adjective that describes the level of dullness. The phrase "as boring as" functions as an adverbial phrase that modifies the verb or adjective in the sentence.
The grammar is all right, but the usage is totally wrong. Precipitate is not used that way.
A dialect is a form of a language spoken in a particular region or by a particular group of people, characterized by distinctive vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation. It may differ from the standard language in terms of pronunciation, vocabulary, and grammar.
"Boring" is a homophone for "boring" in some accents where "boring" is pronounced like "baring."
Conjunction means joining together. In terms of grammar, a conjunction joins two other words to each other. I am eating bread and butter.
The grammar of sound is sound-related grammar. ---Julia M.
boring grammar
coherent (in terms of data) or rhyme (in terms of grammar)
A not entertaining person
For the grammar terms it means the Particular discription.
The distinction is a nondistinction drawn by pedantic teachers of grammar. The two terms are synonyms.
In terms of grammar, it's acceptable.
Although a lathe can bore and drill, it is actually associated with turning. A drilling machine is associated with drilling, a milling machine with milling, and a boring mill with boring.
Not proper grammar, just use other terms to indicate you agree, if you do.
Interesting, exciting, fascinating, thrilling, absorbing, fun. Lots of slang terms, too.
Howard Jackson has written: 'Key Terms in Linguistics (Key Terms)' -- subject(s): Linguistics, Terminology 'Good Grammar for Students'
In terms of grammar, it is the nouns that you learn first. Objects begin to be associated with words.
more boring, most boring