Viewing tag Gross Syntactic State

Number of test suites
4
Average performance
88.92%
Description
No description has been provided for this tag.
Test suites tagged with Gross Syntactic State
  1. Subordination
    • Beginning a sentence with "As", "When", "Before", "After", or "Because", implies that an immediately following clause is not the main clause of the sentence, as would have otherwise been the case, but instead is a subordinate that must be followed by the main clause. Ending the sentence without a main clause is problematic. Conversely, following an initial clause with a second clause (without linking it to the initial clause with "and", "but", "despite", or a similar coordinator or subordinator) is unexpected and odd.
  2. Subordination (with object relative clause)
    • Beginning a sentence with "As", "When", "Before", "After", or "Because", implies that an immediately following clause is not the main clause of the sentence, as would have otherwise been the case, but instead is a subordinate that must be followed by the main clause. Ending the sentence without a main clause is problematic. Conversely, following an initial clause with a second clause (without linking it to the initial clause with "and", "but", "despite", or a similar coordinator or subordinator) is unexpected and odd.
  3. Subordination (with prepositional phrase)
    • Beginning a sentence with "As", "When", "Before", "After", or "Because", implies that an immediately following clause is not the main clause of the sentence, as would have otherwise been the case, but instead is a subordinate that must be followed by the main clause. Ending the sentence without a main clause is problematic. Conversely, following an initial clause with a second clause (without linking it to the initial clause with "and", "but", "despite", or a similar coordinator or subordinator) is unexpected and odd.
  4. Subordination (with subject relative clause)
    • Beginning a sentence with "As", "When", "Before", "After", or "Because", implies that an immediately following clause is not the main clause of the sentence, as would have otherwise been the case, but instead is a subordinate that must be followed by the main clause. Ending the sentence without a main clause is problematic. Conversely, following an initial clause with a second clause (without linking it to the initial clause with "and", "but", "despite", or a similar coordinator or subordinator) is unexpected and odd.
Results for Gross Syntactic State