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		Message board > GRAMMATICAL RULES     
			
		 GRAMMATICAL RULES 
		
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 mft1071
 
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							| GRAMMATICAL RULES 
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							| Here I have another question...Does "grammatical rules" make any sense to you? Is the term logical or not? |  2 Feb 2009      
					
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 denizt
 
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							| It is definitely correct dear.. Do not hesitate! |  2 Feb 2009     
					
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 mft1071
 
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							| I mean the word "rule" itself a good term for explaining a language? What are the rules for? These are some meanings of "rule".Which meaning is appropriate for the term?   
| 1. | a principle or regulation governing conduct, action, procedure, arrangement, etc.: the rules of chess. |  
| 2. | the code of regulations observed by a religious order or congregation: the Franciscan rule. |  
| 3. | the customary or normal circumstance, occurrence, manner, practice, quality, etc.: the rule rather than the exception. |  
| 4. | control, government, or dominion: under the rule of a dictator. |  
| 5. | tenure or conduct of reign or office: during the rule of George III. |  
| 6. | a prescribed mathematical method for performing a calculation or solving a problem. |  
| 8. | (initial capital letter  ) Astronomy. the constellation Norma. |  
| 9. | Printing. a thin, type-high strip of metal, for printing a solid or decorative line or lines. |  
| 10. | Law. 
| a. | a formal order or direction made by a court, as for governing the procedure of the court (general rule) or for sending the case before a referee (special rule). |  
| c. | a court order in a particular case. |  |  
�verb (used with object)
| 11. | rules, Penology. (formerly) 
| a. | a fixed area in the neighborhood of certain prisons within which certain prisoners were allowed to live. |  
| b. | the freedom of such an area. |  |  
| 13. | to control or direct; exercise dominating power, authority, or influence over; govern: to rule the empire with severity. |  
| 14. | to decide or declare judicially or authoritatively; decree: The judge ruled that he should be exiled. |  
| 15. | to mark with lines, esp. parallel straight lines, with the aid of a ruler or the like: to rule paper. |  
| 16. | to mark out or form (a line) by this method: to rule lines on paper. |  
�verb (used without object)
| 17. | to be superior or preeminent in (a specific field or group); dominate by superiority; hold sway over: For centuries, England ruled the seas. |  
| 18. | to exercise dominating power or influence; predominate. |  
| 19. | to exercise authority, dominion, or sovereignty. |  
| 20. | to make a formal decision or ruling, as on a point at law. |  
�Verb phrase
| 21. | to be prevalent or current: Higher prices ruled throughout France. |  
�Idioms
| 22. | rule out, 
| a. | to prove to be unrelated or not for consideration; eliminate; exclude: to rule out the possibility of error. |  
| b. | to make impossible or impracticable: The rainstorm ruled out the holiday camping. |  |  
| 23. | as a rule, generally; usually: He arrives at eleven o�clock, as a rule. |  
| 24. | rule the roost. roost (def. 6). |  
 
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 lilytech
 
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							| Language is a system, as such  rule governed. It is  linguistically correct. Your doubt is pragmatically.  It is good to question the use of lang. Let your brain burn ! |  2 Feb 2009     
					
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 littlecityblue
 
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							| Yes, I�d say number 1 in that list is the one.  Isn�t grammar just a set of rules which have to be applied to make language work? |  2 Feb 2009     
					
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 mft1071
 
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							| When do we need rules? Why are there exceptions? |  2 Feb 2009     
					
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