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grammaticale

Grammaticale is the Italian adjective meaning "grammatical" or "pertaining to grammar." It is commonly used in Italian to describe elements related to grammar, such as rules, analyses, or categories. The word is formed from the noun grammatica (grammar) with the common suffix -ale, and is related to cognates in other Romance languages as well as to the English adjective grammatical.

In Italian, grammaticale has the singular form grammaticale for both masculine and feminine nouns, and the

Grammaticale functions strictly as an attributive or predicative descriptor, not as a standalone noun. To refer

In usage, grammaticale appears across dictionaries, grammars, textbooks, and academic papers, where precise reference to grammatical

plural
form
grammaticali
for
both
genders.
This
makes
it
a
versatile
descriptor
in
technical
and
educational
contexts.
Typical
collocations
include
analisi
grammaticale
(grammatical
analysis),
regole
grammaticali
(grammatical
rules),
and
errore
grammaticale
(grammatical
error).
Other
common
pairings
are
categorie
grammaticale
(grammatical
category)
and
numero
grammaticale
(grammatical
number),
terms
frequently
used
in
grammar
descriptions
and
linguistic
discussions.
to
the
broader
study
of
grammar,
Italian
uses
grammatica
(grammar)
itself
rather
than
a
noun
form
of
grammaticale.
aspects
of
language
is
required.
It
is
understood
by
speakers
of
Italian
and
by
learners
as
the
direct
equivalent
of
the
English
“grammatical”
in
descriptive
linguistic
contexts.
See
also
Grammar,
Grammaticality,
Morphology,
Syntax.