Examples of use of Syntactical
1. Joe Biden, to become lost on the syntactical back roads of their extemporaneous rhetoric.
2. French nouns are either masculine or feminine; French verbs vary with every puff of the syntactical breeze.
3. Then, almost as an afterthought÷ ‘I am pleased to say that your applications have been successful and you will shortly receive a letter inviting you to a citizenship ceremony.‘ The significance of the understatement is surely more than syntactical.
4. "Syntactical crack–ups", "tautologies", "spoonerisms", "missing negatives", "verb reversals", and, brutally, even "ignorance" are among the category mistakes they list. (One example of the last came in 2000, when Bush informed an audience in Texas: "The legislature‘s job is to write the law.
5. First, he said the administration was doing "a heck of a lot better, uh, job of getting control of the border." Then he uttered the forbidden phrase, and it sent him into a syntactical tailspin: "We‘re doing a heck of a job –– lot better job at getting, at getting, uh, the –– the problem of catch–and–release under control." Rove has a lot on his mind these days –– a fact hinted at in the introduction to his speech by AEI President Christopher DeMuth.