How to Use syntactic in a Sentence

syntactic

adjective
  • The syntactic construction of the expression has a clear intent, both confirming the death of one monarch and the rise of another.
    Elise Taylor, Vogue, 8 Sep. 2022
  • But from inside the books, the syntactic icing is so clearly a protective measure, a droll band-aid.
    Rachel Syme, The New Republic, 17 May 2018
  • There is a deep hunger that Sondheim satisfies, for intelligence and syntactic rigor in a form that in lesser hands comes across as pat and lazy.
    Peter Marks, Washington Post, 15 Aug. 2022
  • The first is functional shift, in which a word achieves an additional syntactic function: nouns becoming verbs, verbs becoming nouns, and the like.
    John E. McIntyre, baltimoresun.com, 3 July 2017
  • Flipping their syntactic form does nothing to their semantic role.
    The Economist, 24 May 2018
  • Her lines crackle with syntactic wit: Nouns and verbs can riot and tumble, or, when most keenly needed, be startlingly absent.
    Margalit Fox, New York Times, 16 Jan. 2016
  • Enjambment, when a syntactic unit overflows from one line to the next, is a bedrock poetic practice, one that endows poets with the capacity to make and remake meaning.
    Adam Bradley, New York Times, 4 Mar. 2021
  • Only years of practice, and perhaps a certain gift for syntactic complexity, can bring the practitioner to the highest level.
    George Calhoun, Forbes, 10 May 2021
  • An extra clause is a kind of deceit, a syntactic opportunity to hide the ball, contrary to the straight-shooting world of the TED talk, of counter-intuitive factoids delivered with Gladwellian regularity.
    Kerry Howley, Vulture, 25 Dec. 2021
  • Language, too, has a recursive structure in which a syntactic category such as a sentence can contain other sentence clauses that in turn can contain clauses themselves, and so on.
    Quanta Magazine, 17 Apr. 2019
  • Last Wednesday, with a pandemic spiking and the economy plummeting, Senator Charles Schumer finally lost his cool and dispensed with syntactic best practices in the name of urgency.
    David Roth, The New Republic, 24 Mar. 2020
  • One accepts it in this single case because this writer keeps a kind of terrifying command; the sentences jump ahead of even the most perceptive reader, with a syntactic thrust sufficiently forceful to overcome the aforementioned rules.
    Kerry Howley, Vulture, 25 Dec. 2021
  • Chomsky cannot see any possibility that his interlocutor might make a valid point or two, or that any non-Chomskyan idea in syntactic theory might prove defensible.
    Geoffrey K. Pullum, National Review, 17 Feb. 2022
  • Only in poetry is there so much flexibility and freedom to actually use those kind of pair words together that make intuitive sense but don’t make syntactic sense.
    Tara Duggan, SFChronicle.com, 30 Mar. 2020
  • Greenberg is a linguistics expert who teaches courses in Russian and whose interests include Russian and Slavic linguistics as well as syntactic theory.
    Valerie Strauss, Washington Post, 18 Oct. 2017
  • Most of its bulk consists of a highly specialized syntactic foam—made of tiny ceramic spheres suspended in polymer resin—the only material able to provide buoyancy while remaining uncrushable.
    Susan Casey, Outside Online, 22 Oct. 2019
  • The book is characterized by nostalgia mixed with surgical literary and syntactic analysis.
    Heather Scott Partington, New York Times, 23 June 2017
  • Their arguments were syntactic, based on where specific words and phrases could occur in grammatical sentences, and what would permit transformational operations to be simplified.
    Geoffrey K. Pullum, National Review, 17 Feb. 2022

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'syntactic.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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