> The syntactical study of a language is the study of the expressions of the language and the relations among them _without regard_ to the possible interpretations or 'meaning' of these expressions.
Syntax is talking about the order and placement of propositions relative to connectives and what constitutes a well-formed expression in these terms. Semantics is about what the connectives mean, in other words: truth-functions and truth-values and not just placement and order.
## Formal specification of the syntax of the language of Sentential Logic
### Vocabulary
Propositions in SL are capitalised Roman letters (non-bold) with or without natural number subscripts. We may call these proposition letters. For example:
These definitions provide a formal specification of the concepts of [atomic and molecular propositions](/Logic/Propositional_logic/Atomic_and_molecular_propositions.md) introduced previously.
1. If $P$ is an atomic proposition, $P$ contains no connectives and hence does not have a main connective. $P$ has no immediate propositional components.
1. If $P$ is of the form $\lnot Q$ where $Q$ is a proposition, then the main connective of $P$ is the negation symbol that occurs before $Q$ and $Q$ is the immediate propositional component of $P$
where $Q$ and $R$ are propositions, then the main connective of $P$ is the connective that occurs between $Q$ and $R$ and $Q$ and $R$ are the immediate propositional components of $P$.