Grammatically Correct Sentence
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A Grammatically Correct Sentence is a linguistic sentence that is a grammatically correct expression.
- AKA: Grammatical Linguistic Sentence.
- Context:
- It can have a Sentence Subject.
- It can have a Sentence Object.
- It can map to a string produced by a Formal Grammar.
- …
- Example(s):
- “Run!”, an Exclamatory Sentence.
- “I ran home.”, a Declarative Sentence.
- “Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.”, a Declarative Sentence.
- “Where is Waldo?”, an Interrogative Sentence.
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Formal Sentence.
References
2007
- (Kakkonen, 2007) ⇒ Tuomo Kakkonen. (2007). “Framework and Resources for Natural Language Evaluation." Academic Dissertation. University of Joensuu.
- A language follows the rules of a given grammar and is represented by using a particular grammar formalism.
- Definition 3-4. Grammar, rules.
- Definition 3-5. Language generated by a grammar, derivation, grammatical and ungrammatical strings.
- Let L(G) denote that grammar G generates language L.
- The process of grammar rule applications is referred to as derivation.
- L(G) is the set of sentences that can be derived by the grammar G.
- The sentences that grammar G generates are referred to as grammatical.
- The sentences that are not generated by G are referred to as ungrammatical.