English grammar/Related Articles

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A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about English grammar.
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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Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/English grammar. Needs checking by a human.

  • 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]