https://goo.gl/Rs6ciC http://grammarist.com/articles/grammarly-review/

Paragraph​ ​Checker​ ​Online Plagiarism​ ​Checker We​ ​used​ ​this​ ​paragraph​ ​to​ ​test​ ​Grammarly’s​ ​plagiarism​ ​checker: §​ ​ ​Offering​ ​someone​ ​a​ ​drink​ ​is​ ​a​ ​sign​ ​of​ ​trust​ ​and​ ​friendship​ ​and​ ​it​ ​is​ ​a​ ​faux​ ​pas​ ​to turn​ ​down​ ​the​ ​proposal.​ ​You’d​ ​not​ ​want​ ​to​ ​offend​ ​a​ ​local​ ​by​ ​declining​ ​their​ ​offer​ ​of a​ ​drink​ ​and​ ​have​ ​to​ ​deal​ ​with​ ​a​ ​confrontation​ ​as​ ​your​ ​glass​ ​is​ ​hurled​ ​at​ ​the​ ​glass splashbacks​ ​of​ ​a​ ​bar!​ ​Vodka​ ​is​ ​always​ ​drunk​ ​neat​ ​and​ ​without​ ​ice,​ ​as​ ​adding anything​ ​is​ ​seen​ ​as​ ​compromising​ ​the​ ​purity​ ​of​ ​the​ ​drink.​ ​Unless​ ​of​ ​course​ ​the vodka​ ​is​ ​mixed​ ​with​ ​beer,​ ​which​ ​creates​ ​a​ ​hefty​ ​blend​ ​that​ ​Russians​ ​call​ ​‘yorsh’. The​ ​paragraph​ ​was​ ​taken​ ​from​ ​the​ ​website​ ​blog.joytours.com,​ ​and​ ​Grammarly​ ​correctly identified​ ​the​ ​source​ ​and​ ​flagged​ ​it​ ​as​ ​100​ ​percent​ ​unoriginal.​ ​It​ ​also​ ​offered​ ​a suggestion​ ​for​ ​a​ ​vocabulary​ ​enhancement,​ ​saying​ ​that​ ​“blend”​ ​might​ ​be​ ​pair​ ​better​ ​with “strong”​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​“hefty.” By​ ​changing​ ​only​ ​a​ ​couple​ ​of​ ​words​ ​in​ ​the​ ​original​ ​material,​ ​we​ ​managed​ ​to​ ​get​ ​a​ ​100 percent​ ​original​ ​rating: §​ ​ ​Offering​ ​someone​ ​a​ ​drink​ ​is​ ​a​ ​good​ ​sign​ ​of​ ​trust​ ​and​ ​friendship​ ​and​ ​it​ ​is​ ​a​ ​faux pas​ ​to​ ​turn​ ​down​ ​the​ ​proposal.​ ​You’d​ ​not​ ​want​ ​to​ ​offend​ ​a​ ​native​ ​by​ ​declining​ ​their offer​ ​of​ ​a​ ​drink​ ​and​ ​have​ ​to​ ​deal​ ​with​ ​an​ ​argument​ ​as​ ​your​ ​glass​ ​is​ ​hurled​ ​at​ ​the glass​ ​splashbacks​ ​of​ ​a​ ​bar!​ ​The​ ​national​ ​drink​ ​is​ ​always​ ​drunk​ ​neat​ ​and​ ​with​ ​no ice,​ ​as​ ​adding​ ​anything​ ​is​ ​seen​ ​as​ ​compromising​ ​the​ ​integrity​ ​of​ ​the​ ​drink.​ ​Unless of​ ​course​ ​the​ ​drink​ ​is​ ​mixed​ ​with​ ​lager,​ ​which​ ​creates​ ​a​ ​strong​ ​blend​ ​that​ ​Russians call​ ​‘yorsh’. We​ ​also​ ​got​ ​two​ ​more​ ​vocabulary​ ​enhancement​ ​warnings—Grammarly​ ​told​ ​us​ ​that​ ​we repeated​ ​the​ ​word​ ​“drink”​ ​too​ ​many​ ​times,​ ​and​ ​that​ ​“strong”​ ​is​ ​an​ ​overused​ ​term​ ​we might​ ​want​ ​to​ ​replace.​ ​Both​ ​times,​ ​Grammarly​ ​gave​ ​suggestions​ ​for​ ​substitutes. Genre-Specific​ ​Writing​ ​Checker So​ ​far,​ ​we’ve​ ​checked​ ​everything​ ​using​ ​the​ ​default​ ​“general”​ ​setting​ ​Grammarly​ ​offers. To​ ​see​ ​if​ ​changing​ ​this​ ​setting​ ​makes​ ​any​ ​difference,​ ​we’ll​ ​use​ ​part​ ​of​ ​a​ ​research proposal,​ ​run​ ​it​ ​through​ ​a​ ​couple​ ​of​ ​genre-specific​ ​checks,​ ​and​ ​see​ ​what​ ​we​ ​get.

https://goo.gl/Rs6ciC http://grammarist.com/articles/grammarly-review/

§​ ​ ​Limitations​ ​of​ ​the​ ​current​ ​research​ ​will​ ​be​ ​identified,​ ​along​ ​with​ ​suggestions​ ​for how​ ​future​ ​research​ ​can​ ​build​ ​upon​ ​the​ ​findings​ ​of​ ​the​ ​current​ ​study.​ ​One limitation​ ​to​ ​the​ ​generalizability​ ​of​ ​the​ ​findings​ ​is​ ​the​ ​use​ ​of​ ​only​ ​one​ ​photograph of​ ​one​ ​infant​ ​of​ ​a​ ​particular​ ​age.​ ​Future​ ​research​ ​could​ ​utilize​ ​photographs​ ​of infants​ ​of​ ​a​ ​variety​ ​of​ ​ages​ ​to​ ​establish​ ​the​ ​robustness​ ​of​ ​the​ ​results​ ​of​ ​the​ ​present study.​ ​Finally,​ ​the​ ​results​ ​and​ ​importance​ ​of​ ​this​ ​study​ ​will​ ​be​ ​summarized. Grammarly​ ​instantly​ ​flagged​ ​the​ ​paragraph​ ​as​ ​plagiarism​ ​(it​ ​came​ ​from​ ​a​ ​PDF​ ​file downloaded​ ​from​ ​a​ ​source​ ​on​ ​the​ ​web).​ ​Under​ ​the​ ​“general”​ ​setting,​ ​Grammarly identified​ ​the​ ​words​ ​“current,”​ ​“photographs,”​ ​and​ ​“infants”​ ​as​ ​overused​ ​terms​ ​and offered​ ​synonyms​ ​to​ ​replace​ ​them.​ ​When​ ​we​ ​set​ ​the​ ​writing​ ​style​ ​as​ ​“research​ ​proposal,” “infants”​ ​ ​disappeared​ ​from​ ​the​ ​flagged​ ​list.​ ​Selecting​ ​“business​ ​letter”​ ​brought​ ​“infants” back.​ ​Changing​ ​the​ ​style​ ​to​ ​“end-user​ ​assistance”​ ​removed​ ​“infants”​ ​again​ ​but​ ​also brought​ ​a​ ​style​ ​tip—technical​ ​writing​ ​is​ ​almost​ ​exclusively​ ​written​ ​in​ ​the​ ​present​ ​tense, and​ ​the​ ​paragraph​ ​contains​ ​two​ ​uses​ ​of​ ​the​ ​future​ ​tense.​ ​Other​ ​document​ ​types​ ​we​ ​tried produced​ ​similar​ ​results.

https://goo.gl/Rs6ciC http://grammarist.com/articles/grammarly-review/

British​ ​English​ ​vs.​ ​American​ ​English​ ​Test For​ ​this​ ​test,​ ​we’ll​ ​create​ ​a​ ​series​ ​of​ ​sentences​ ​that​ ​contain​ ​distinctly​ ​British​ ​spelling​ ​and grammatical​ ​structures. §​ ​ ​The​ ​flock​ ​were​ ​flying.​ ​John​ ​had​ ​a​ ​nap.​ ​I​ ​will​ ​go​ ​there​ ​at​ ​the​ ​weekend.​ ​This sentence​ ​is​ ​different​ ​to​ ​the​ ​last​ ​one.​ ​I​ ​liked​ ​the​ ​flavour​ ​and​ ​colour​ ​of​ ​it.​ ​Let’s​ ​see what​ ​we​ ​learnt​ ​yesterday.​ ​Mr​ ​Peters​ ​told​ ​me​ ​so. In​ ​the​ ​first​ ​sentence,​ ​the​ ​verb​ ​“were”​ ​is​ ​used​ ​with​ ​the​ ​collective​ ​noun​ ​“flock,”​ ​as​ ​it​ ​is​ ​in British​ ​English.​ ​In​ ​the​ ​second​ ​sentence,​ ​we​ ​used​ ​“have”​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​the​ ​usual​ ​American “take.”​ ​In​ ​the​ ​third​ ​sentence,​ ​the​ ​preposition​ ​“at”​ ​was​ ​used​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​“on,”​ ​and​ ​in​ ​the fourth​ ​“to”​ ​was​ ​used​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​“from.”​ ​“Flavour”​ ​and​ ​“colour”​ ​are​ ​British​ ​spellings,​ ​and the​ ​past​ ​tense​ ​“learnt”​ ​was​ ​used​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​“learned.”​ ​In​ ​the​ ​last​ ​sentence,​ ​the​ ​title​ ​“Mr” was​ ​written​ ​without​ ​a​ ​period​ ​after​ ​it.

https://goo.gl/Rs6ciC http://grammarist.com/articles/grammarly-review/

Out​ ​of​ ​the​ ​eight​ ​Briticisms​ ​present​ ​in​ ​these​ ​sentences,​ ​Grammarly​ ​flagged​ ​five—the plural​ ​verb​ ​with​ ​collective​ ​nouns,​ ​the​ ​“-our”​ ​spellings​ ​of​ ​“flavor”​ ​and​ ​“color,”​ ​“learnt” instead​ ​of​ ​“learned,”​ ​and​ ​the​ ​missing​ ​period​ ​after​ ​a​ ​title.​ ​That’s​ ​five​ ​out​ ​of​ ​eight. Just​ ​for​ ​the​ ​fun​ ​of​ ​it,​ ​we​ ​ran​ ​the​ ​same​ ​text​ ​through​ ​a​ ​complete​ ​check​ ​but​ ​with Grammarly​ ​set​ ​to​ ​British​ ​English,​ ​and​ ​no​ ​flags​ ​were​ ​raised.​ ​Let’s​ ​see​ ​how​ ​Grammarly works​ ​the​ ​other​ ​way​ ​around. §​ ​ ​I​ ​have​ ​gotten​ ​in​ ​before.​ ​We​ ​learned​ ​advanced​ ​math​ ​in​ ​college.​ ​Do​ ​me​ ​a​ ​favor and​ ​take​ ​a​ ​bath.​ ​You​ ​broke​ ​your​ ​nose—does​ ​it​ ​hurt?​ ​We​ ​were​ ​well​ ​organized.​ ​He had​ ​a​ ​dialog. In​ ​the​ ​first​ ​sentence,​ ​the​ ​past​ ​participle​ ​“gotten”​ ​was​ ​used​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​“got.”​ ​In​ ​the second,​ ​“math”​ ​was​ ​used​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​“maths”,​ ​the​ ​preposition​ ​“in”​ ​was​ ​used​ ​instead​ ​of “at,”​ ​and​ ​“college”​ ​was​ ​used​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​“university.”​ ​“Favor”​ ​was​ ​spelled​ ​the​ ​American way​ ​in​ ​the​ ​third,​ ​and​ ​“take”​ ​was​ ​used​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​“have.”​ ​The​ ​fourth​ ​sentence​ ​contains​ ​the simple​ ​past​ ​tense​ ​instead​ ​of​ ​the​ ​present​ ​perfect,​ ​which​ ​would​ ​be​ ​correct​ ​in​ ​British English.​ ​In​ ​the​ ​last​ ​two​ ​sentences,​ ​the​ ​words​ ​“organized”​ ​and​ ​“dialog”​ ​are​ ​spelled​ ​in​ ​the American​ ​English​ ​way. Grammarly​ ​flagged​ ​only​ ​the​ ​American​ ​spellings​ ​of​ ​“favor,”​ ​“organized,”​ ​and​ ​“dialog”​ ​and failed​ ​to​ ​notice​ ​the​ ​rest​ ​of​ ​the​ ​issues.​ ​That’s​ ​three​ ​out​ ​of​ ​nine,​ ​and​ ​it​ ​brings​ ​us​ ​to​ ​a​ ​total of​ ​eight​ ​out​ ​of​ ​seventeen.

https://goo.gl/Rs6ciC http://grammarist.com/articles/grammarly-review/

Related​ ​content: English​ ​Grammar​ ​Online Grammar​ ​Online Grammar​ ​Test​ ​Online Grammarly​ ​Online English​ ​Grammar​ ​Test​ ​Online Online​ ​Grammar​ ​Editor Check​ ​My​ ​Grammar​ ​Online Grammarly​ ​Check​ ​Online Check​ ​Your​ ​Grammar​ ​Online Check​ ​Grammar​ ​And​ ​Spelling​ ​Online​ ​Free Check​ ​My​ ​Grammar​ ​Online​ ​Free Free​ ​Online​ ​Grammar Related​ ​links: https://goo.gl/zizm6U https://goo.gl/Mwmvx8 https://goo.gl/mcUFQC https://goo.gl/XEfhN8 https://goo.gl/NBA7UP https://goo.gl/Gb6mHg https://goo.gl/BMhC6t https://goo.gl/K4w248 https://goo.gl/dQbapU https://goo.gl/SNtsGg https://goo.gl/G1BPEd https://goo.gl/g2NFVq https://goo.gl/ojFHJW

Grammatical Errors

http://grammarist.com/articles/grammarly-review/. British​ ​English​ ​vs.​ ​American​ ​English​ ​Test. For this test, we'll create a series of sentences that contain distinctly British spelling and. grammatical structures. § The flock were flying. John had a nap. I will go there at the weekend. This. sentence is different to the ...

192KB Sizes 1 Downloads 256 Views

Recommend Documents

Hierarchical Grammatical Evolution
in the language de ned by the grammar (the phenotype) by means ... to weakly comply to the variational inheritance principle, stating. Permission to make digital ...

About Grammatical Framework
Jan 8, 2003 - is a generic system used to write and uses mathematical theories with a logical calculus. .... command line interpreter : functions to read grammar files and use grammars in ... delete : replaces subtree with a metavariable.

Hierarchical Grammatical Evolution
Jul 19, 2017 - ant Weighted HGE (WHGE), two novel genotype-phenotype map- ... ability to evolve programs in any language, using a user-provided.

server errors - Sascha Fahl
Certificate error reports may contain private information. For ex- ample, a certificate from an intranet might ... example, if the user's local system clock is set incorrectly, it may prevent a report about the condition from ...... droid, accounting

server errors - Sascha Fahl
HTTPS connection and replaces the certificate chain with one that the client cannot validate. Our pipeline classifies the following types of network errors: 4.3.1 Captive portal errors. Airport, hotel, and enterprise net- works often block access to

Evolvability in Grammatical Evolution
and context-free languages; •Computing methodologies → Heuris- ... classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed ... Figure 1: From Fitness Cloud to Fitness-Probability Cloud. ..... Figure 3: AEP vs. genoty

Grammatical Evolution and Corporate Failure ... Accounts
Kingston Business School, London. Conor Ryan .... business, to legal bankruptcy followed by liquidation of the firm's .... representing the programs as parse trees, as in traditional .... table that each model only employed a small subset of these.

Cohesive Devices- Errors - UsingEnglish.com
Because the indigenous people have never really gained equal rights. 4. There are many reasons why the number of temporary positions is increasing. For ex-.

Evolvability in Grammatical Evolution
each candidate solution. ... Figure 1: From Fitness Cloud to Fitness-Probability Cloud. ... the crossover operator, a pair of parents is needed but only the best.

Evolvability in Grammatical Evolution
share the same phenotype? 4Often ..... Lu, Li, and Yao, “Fitness-probability cloud and a measure of problem hardness for evolutionary algorithms”. Medvet ...

Spandanam_Worksheet of various grammatical terms for SSLC ...
Vanka was writing a letter to his grandfather. 2. He posted the letter without writing the address. 3. ... Conditional Sentences. Conditionals If-clause Main clause. First conditional Simple present ... Spandanam_Worksheet of various grammatical term

Grammatical evolution - Evolutionary Computation, IEEE ... - IEEE Xplore
definition are used in a genotype-to-phenotype mapping process to a program. ... evolutionary process on the actual programs, but rather on vari- able-length ...

Christiansen Grammar Evolution: grammatical ...
Computer Science. Chomsky ... they have been little used in computer science to formally ...... the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Computer.

Inferring universals from grammatical variation
plane) is the crucial element, since for any roll-call vote we are interested in who voted 'Yea' .... In two dimensions, there are only 24 errors across 1250 data points. ..... the Quotative near the center of the vertical area. ... by a Present or I

Peters McLuhan's Grammatical Theology.pdf
Technology is behind the Medieval Centre [at the University of Toronto]?” asked. McLuhan in 1973 (Gordon 1997, 323). In his Cambridge dissertation we have a ...

errors = validator.validate(user)
based on the domain model (JavaBeans™). • Standard way to validate constraints. • one runtime engine. • same validation implementations shared. • Bridge for ...

IELTS Listening- Typical Errors - UsingEnglish.com
12 Batchelor of Science. 13 bristol ... 101 powerfull computer programs .... short e (leisure activities, boats/ pleasure craft), ch (Bachelor of Science, matching.

The influence of grammatical features on linearization ...
XP. 3. DP. X'. John 3. X. DP. Mary. Richards (2010) also states that Distinctness only affects functional heads which enter the derivation as feature bundles and that Distinctness effects arise before vocabulary insertion. ...... This means, that ass

english Spotting errors 13.03.2015.pdf
Diamond is (1) / not found (2) / everywhere. (3) / since it is a rare ... candidates to have clarity on the same. .... Displaying english Spotting errors 13.03.2015.pdf.

RAIM with Non-Gaussian Errors
conducted under a space-‐based augmentation system. (SBAS) or ground-‐based .... Accounting for biases and unequal variances in the distribution of ε .... P , we conclude that VPL ≤ VAL and the precision approach may be executed. Implementatio

Learning representations by back-propagating errors
or output come to represent important features of the task domain, and the regularities in the task are captured by the interactions of these units The ability to ...

Unconscious errors enhance prefrontal-occipital ... - Semantic Scholar
Nov 24, 2009 - synchrony was taken from three temporal windows (first averaging from 2–12 Hz): −1200 to −300 ms ... the analyses using different time windows did not appreciably alter the results. Averaged data were entered .... unconscious err

Business English Presentations- Correct the Errors - UsingEnglish.com
Correct your own errors in your homework or things you said in the last class that your ... There is a list of original sources in the last page of the handout.