This is gonna be the first 'word of the Day' post. Each day, a new word will be posted, something to keep it all interesting if I can't think of anything to write. :P Ok, here goes...
Word of the Day for Sunday March 13, 2005
parse \PAHRS\, transitive verb:
1. To resolve (as a sentence) into its component parts of speech with an explanation of the form, function, and syntactical relationship of each part.
2. To describe grammatically by stating its part of speech, form, and syntactical relationships in a sentence.
3. To examine closely or analyze critically, especially by breaking up into components.
4. To make sense of; to comprehend.
5. (Computer Science) To analyze or separate (input, for example) into more easily processed components.
intransitive verb: To admit of being parsed.
We must learn to parse sentences and to analyse the grammar of our text, for, as Roman Jakobson has taught us, there is no access to the grammar of poetry, to the nerve and sinew of the poem, if one is blind to the poetry of grammar. --George Steiner, [1]No Passion Spent: Essays 1978-1995
There are too many spots where the rhythm goes momentarily awry; where words are used with murk, sloppiness or phonetic imprecision; where sentences are so twisted around that they become hard to parse; even times where it's hard to be sure just who or what is being referred to. --Douglas Hofstadter, "What's Gained in Translation," [2]New York Times, December 8, 1996
Word of the Day provided by Dictionary.com
Sunday, March 13, 2005
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2 comments:
Never know it before, Meggie. Now that I know it, I might start using it. lol.
your fugacious memory is revealing it's nature.
~AKCameraGuy~
P.S. parse is 5 letters.
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