English grammar/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to English grammar, or pages that link to English grammar or to this page or whose text contains "English grammar".
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- Democrat Party (phrase) [r]: A phrase used by Republicans in the United States to refer to the opposition Democratic Party, and assumed by many Democrats to be an insulting, disparaging or derogatory term. [e]
- Descriptive linguistics [r]: The work of analyzing and describing how language is spoken (or how it was spoken in the past) by a group of people in a speech community. [e]
- English language [r]: A West Germanic language widely spoken in the United Kingdom, its territories and dependencies, Commonwealth countries and former colonial outposts of the British Empire; has developed the status of a global language. [e]
- Geoffrey Chaucer [r]: (1345-1400) English poet, author of The Canterbury Tales. [e]
- Linguistic prescriptivism [r]: The laying down or prescribing of normative rules for the use of a language, or the making of recommendations for effective language usage. [e]
- Noun [r]: Linguistic item with grammatical properties such as countability, case, gender and number; has a distinct syntactic function (e.g. acting as subject or object in a clause), and used to name a person, place, thing, quality, or action. [e]
- Plural [r]: Grammatical form that designates, relates to or composed of more than one member, set, or kind of objects specified. [e]
- Pronoun [r]: A pro-form that substitutes for a noun (or noun phrase) with or without a determiner, such as you and they in English. [e]
- School [r]: Please do not use this term in your topic list, because there is no single article for it. Please substitute a more precise term. See School (disambiguation) for a list of available, more precise, topics. Please add a new usage if needed.
- Verb [r]: A word in the structure of written and spoken languages that generally defines action. [e]