How to Use grammatically in a Sentence
grammatically
adverb-
There was also a bit of doth protest too much in Brown’s efforts to write himself as a hopelessly dim, poorly read, grammatically challenged, outsider.
— John Tamny, Forbes, 18 May 2022 -
Some of the sentences were grammatically correct, while others were scrambled.
— Carl Zimmer, Discover Magazine, 24 Oct. 2012 -
And then various editors went through three or four rounds to fix the grammar, and finally, there is a version that is grammatically acceptable.
— David Allen, New York Times, 20 June 2023 -
The reinterpretation leads for the first time to grammatically correct results with few exceptions.
— Erika Page, The Christian Science Monitor, 18 Jan. 2023 -
According to the researchers, all of ChatGPT’s responses were grammatically correct, and nearly all of them contained only one joke.
— Andrew Paul, Popular Science, 14 June 2023 -
One eerie consequence of using programs like ChatGPT to generate language is that the text is grammatically perfect.
— Fortune, 19 Jan. 2023 -
In the days when paper airplane tickets were ubiquitous, airlines were happy to print unpleasant truths on the back, albeit in grammatically tortured, microscopic print.
— Jacobina Martin, Washington Post, 11 Jan. 2023 -
Both Danaher and Fond noted English has adjusted in recent years to encompass gender norms in ways that would’ve been seen as grammatically incorrect but are now socially acceptable.
— Washington Post, 4 June 2021 -
The hackers left threatening and grammatically incorrect messages in Polish, Ukrainian, and Russian, on the foreign ministry website.
— Amiah Taylor, Fortune, 14 Jan. 2022 -
For example, Old English was grammatically gendered until partway through the middle ages, when changes in the way people spoke eventually eroded the vocal distinctions between male and female.
— Cody Cottier, Discover Magazine, 1 June 2018 -
For one, many social engineering emails aren't designed to be perfect (grammatically or otherwise).
— Ryan Kalember, Forbes, 27 Mar. 2023 -
Grammarly’s algorithm is trained on millions of grammatically correct sentences and inputs from users and their writing experiences.
— Rashi Shrivastava, Forbes, 9 Mar. 2023 -
To begin with, these peculiar two-noun phrases are grammatically incorrect.
— Rachel Lance, Scientific American, 2 July 2020 -
Those nastiest messages are usually the longest and most grammatically correct.
— Ginny Hogan, The Atlantic, 8 Nov. 2022 -
Others pointed out the grammatically incorrect Spanish on 818 Tequila's labels.
— NBC News, 18 Feb. 2022 -
Not many of us, thumbing away on our phones, would compose such a grammatically coherent, cleanly punctuated missive, without an abbreviation, emoji or autocorrect snafu in sight.
— A.o. Scott, New York Times, 3 May 2023 -
Grammarly ensures your messages are professional and grammatically correct by offering spell checking, tone suggestions and even vocabulary hints.
— John Hall, Forbes, 19 Sep. 2021 -
Comments on Instagram have been superlative, and remarkably grammatically correct.
— Bryan Alexander, USA TODAY, 8 Oct. 2020 -
Uniformly, these essays were clear, concise, grammatically correct and properly punctuated.
— Steven M. Galbraith, WSJ, 23 Dec. 2020 -
However, conventional use actually leans significantly toward saying Daylight Savings Time despite being grammatically incorrect.
— Chris Sims, The Indianapolis Star, 14 Feb. 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'grammatically.' 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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