A grammarian is a person who studies or is an expert in grammar. A case grammarian would be a grammarian who is specifically an expert on the different cases in grammar.
The collective noun for grammarians is a conjunction of grammarians.
This is a very interesting question. "Yours" is the special possessive case of the pronoun "you", even though the normal possessive case is "your" When the possessive case is separated by an active verb, or is otherwise separated by several words, from the word that it modifies or of which it indicates ownership, the special possessive case forms "mine", "yours", "ours", and "theirs" should be used instead of the respective normal possessive case forms, "my", "your", "our", and "their". Also note that, because of its function in a sentence, some grammarians prefer to call a possessive pronoun a "functional adjective".
Loquacious means chatty or knowing many words, especially unusual words. Verbose means good at speaking for long periods of time. Grammarians study a language for a living.
Rubble is the remains of something that has been destroyed or broken up. This word is never inflected for plural. It's customary to indicate its plural form with the measure word "piles of," as in "piles of rubble." (Grammarians call words that are invariably singular in form "singulare tantum")
The phrase "must have" is usually regarded as a compound verb, but some grammarians might say that it consists of the active verb "must" and the infinitive verbal "have". ("Must" is one of the few verbs in English for which the word "to" can be omitted in the infinitive form of an immediately following verb.)
The collective noun for grammarians is a conjunction of grammarians.
who are grammarians in the philippines
Caulfield Grammarians Football Club was created in 1920.
grammarians
To answer this question we need a who, what, where, when or how. Your question is not finished and needs a what.
Adverb
The triliteral root or jedhr of sayaara (سيارة) is either "syr" (سير) or "sar" (سار). Both are correct, but "syr" is agreed upon by all grammarians while "sar" is less popular. The difference is that some grammarians argue that alif cannot be a root letter, because alif is the only letter in Arabic which is a vowel and a number of grammarians argue that it is impossible for vowels to be constituent entities of a triliteral root.Please see Hans Wehr Dictionary pages 521 and 522 for further clarification.
Throughout history, the nature of syllogistic logic and deductive reasoning was shaped by grammarians, mathematicians, and philosophers.
The origin of modern grammar is typically traced back to the work of the Greek scholar Pamphilus of Alexandria in the 3rd century BCE. Pamphilus' work was based on the earlier grammarians of the Alexandrian school, including Zenodotus, Dionysius Thrax, and Aristarchus. These grammarians developed a systematic approach to grammar that was continued by later scholars such as Apollonius Dyscolus and Hermogenes.
This is a very interesting question. "Yours" is the special possessive case of the pronoun "you", even though the normal possessive case is "your" When the possessive case is separated by an active verb, or is otherwise separated by several words, from the word that it modifies or of which it indicates ownership, the special possessive case forms "mine", "yours", "ours", and "theirs" should be used instead of the respective normal possessive case forms, "my", "your", "our", and "their". Also note that, because of its function in a sentence, some grammarians prefer to call a possessive pronoun a "functional adjective".
Yes although grammarians would argue that you can't end a sentence with a preposition but ignore 'em.
John Kigan has written: 'Remarks on the practice of grammarians; with an attempt to discover the principles of a new system of english grammar'