First Known Use: 1574
Dictionary
syntax
noun syn·tax \ˈsin-ˌtaks\
linguistics : the way in which words are put together to form phrases, clauses, or sentences
Full Definition of SYNTAX
1
a : the way in which linguistic elements (as words) are put together to form constituents (as phrases or clauses) b : the part of grammar dealing with this
2
: a connected or orderly system : harmonious arrangement of parts or elements <the syntax of classical architecture>
3
: syntactics especially as dealing with the formal properties of languages or calculi
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Examples of SYNTAX
- Everyone has good days and bad days. Her syntax is sometimes a world unto itself. But George H.W. Bush occasionally sounded as though English were more foe than friend, and he was an astute president who managed complexity with skill and balance. —Jon Meacham, Newsweek, 13 Oct. 2008
- Coming from a great distance and wholly unrelated to the Teutonic, Latin and Slav languages that fence it in, Hungarian has remained miraculously intact. Everything about the language is different, not only the words themselves, but the way they are formed, the syntax and grammar and above all the cast of mind that brought them into being. —Patrick Leigh Fermor, Between the Woods and the Water, 1986
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Origin of SYNTAX
Middle French or Late Latin; Middle French sintaxe, from Late Latin syntaxis, from Greek, from syntassein to arrange together, from syn- + tassein to arrange
Other Grammar and Linguistics Terms
SYNTAX Defined for Kids
syntax
noun syn·tax \ˈsin-ˌtaks\
Definition of SYNTAX for Kids
: the way in which words are put together to form phrases, clauses, or sentences
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