0
Klavier Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

Longest English word

Hello.
If you see this post you'll see that English language seems to allow this construction. Maybe this is merely a chemistry issue that only chemists understand, but I wonder if there is something grammatically wrong with this pointless model of formation of words.
  

Top answer

Hi, If you consider grammar to be concerned with putting groups of words together, you wouldn't really call this grammatically wrong. Best wishes, Clive

  • Hi, If you consider grammar to be concerned with putting groups of words together, you wouldn't really call this grammatically wrong.
  • Best wishes, Clive
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
Hi,

If you consider grammar to be concerned with putting groups of words together, you wouldn't really call this grammatically wrong.

Best wishes, Clive
0
It is the chemical name for Titin, and it is StartFragment >

EndFragment >
0
Hi,

Can you use it in a sentence, please?

Clive

Related Questions