generative ruleの例文
- Systems here mean to Giddens " the situated activities of human agents " ( " The Constitution of Society . " ) and " the patterning of social relations across space-time " ( " Politics, Sociology and Social Theory " ) and " systems of generative rules and sets, implicated in the articulation of social systems " ( " The Constitution of Society . " ), existing virtually " out of time and out of space " ( " New rules . . . . " ).
- Therefore, when referring to similar grammatical mistakes heard in the speech of Athenians, they described them as " solecisms " and that term has been adopted as a label for grammatical mistakes in any language; in Greek there is often a distinction in the relevant terms in that a mistake in semantics ( " i . e . ", a use of words with other-than-appropriate meaning or a neologism constructed through application of generative rules by an outsider ) is called a " barbarism " ( " barbarismos " ), whereas " solecism " refers to mistakes in syntax, in the construction of sentences.
- argues that comprehension across varieties, when it is found, isn't sufficient enough evidence for the claim that polylectal grammars are part of speakers'linguistic competence . argues that an extrapolated panlectal ( or even broadly polylectal ) grammar from " idiosyncratic " grammars, such as those found in, would still not be part of speakers'linguistic competence; argues that attempting a polylectal grammar that encodes for a large number of dialects becomes too bizarre and that the traditional reconstructed proto-language is more appropriate for the stated benefits of polylectal grammars ., notable for advocating the construction of polylectal grammars, says that the generative rules of such grammars should be panlectal in the sense that they are " potentially " learned in the acquisition process, though no speaker should be expected to learn all of them.