1. To be within the confines of the English language. To use correct grammar.
2. Displaying a special flair for grammar.
2. Displaying a special flair for grammar.
Girl, let me tell you something. That boy at the club, he was so grammarous. I love the way he modified his prepositional phrases.
by DonnyRatchet June 25, 2007
by gusllywiggum December 31, 2012
by whitetiger16 April 10, 2004
The girl corrected her peer for his poor grammar, and was then beaten into a pulp and called a nerd.
by Eponine March 24, 2004
1. a universally accepted form of writing or speaking that appropriately conveys a person's thoughts so that others may understand it.
2. a dying art.
3. not something that is readily experienced while surfing the Internet.
4. something that 99% of people in the world have no concept of.
5. a form of writing or speaking which is hard to learn and hence is ignored by the general populous.
6. a knowledge which is deeply rewarding, although not deemed important or crucial by small people.
2. a dying art.
3. not something that is readily experienced while surfing the Internet.
4. something that 99% of people in the world have no concept of.
5. a form of writing or speaking which is hard to learn and hence is ignored by the general populous.
6. a knowledge which is deeply rewarding, although not deemed important or crucial by small people.
by Severian_ November 23, 2006
Steve (the ginger): Hey lora, are you good at grammaring? Im not sure if this sounds right
Lora: ...
Chances are its not....
Lora: ...
Chances are its not....
by ngroat7007 October 07, 2009
Something that has not been adequately defined by some other definitions; refers to the rules used to combine words together in order to form meaning within a given language.
"i don liek u becoz u suck"==grammatically correct, despite spelling shortcuts and the lack of capitalization/punctuation. These are mechanical/technical errors.
"She go to house red last Saturday."==despite perfect mechanics, this is not grammatically correct, due to a tense mismatch (needs to be past tense, verb misinflection (should be "she goes"), missing article ("the" or "a"), and adjective-noun word order reversal.
"i don liek u becoz u suck"==grammatically correct, despite spelling shortcuts and the lack of capitalization/punctuation. These are mechanical/technical errors.
"She go to house red last Saturday."==despite perfect mechanics, this is not grammatically correct, due to a tense mismatch (needs to be past tense, verb misinflection (should be "she goes"), missing article ("the" or "a"), and adjective-noun word order reversal.
by Zalis August 18, 2004