well formed; in accordance with the productive rules of grammar of the language
Grammatically means "according to the rules of grammar", which are the rules for how we treat and use our language.
What are you trying to ask? Are you trying to say, "What are some manifestations of grammatical errors in the written English language?" Or are you trying to say, "What does 'manifestation of grammatical errors' mean regarding written English?"
Language conventions are language conventions
A grammatical person is a person who teaches or who is expert in grammar.
No, sader is not a word.Did you mean the word sadder? Sadder is a grammatical word and means to be more sad.
grammatical lead- they start with various grammatical structures which achieve paper relationship between facts and add vigor to the sentence structure.
It is most likely referring to the grammatical parts of speech.The eight parts of speech are:VerbsNounsAdjectivesAdverbsPronounsPropositionsConjunctionsInterjections
What are you trying to ask? Are you trying to say, "What are some manifestations of grammatical errors in the written English language?" Or are you trying to say, "What does 'manifestation of grammatical errors' mean regarding written English?"
That doesn't make grammatical sense.
It is not grammatical. It means: "warm Pedro nap"
Both are grammatical. They mean slightly different things.
As an adjective, abessive means "of of relating to the grammatical case which indicates absence".
defination of grammatical weight
Simile is grammatical term used to compare two objects!
Presumably 'correct, grammatical Spanish' as against slang; the equivalent to Standard English.
Doctine is not a grammatical word in English. Did you mean the word doctrine? Doctrine is a noun.
The word antibacteria isn't a grammatical word. Did you mean antibacterial? Antibacterial is an adjective.
This is not a grammatical sentence. It's missing the verb "are"; it actually means "when you sleeping".