Two experiments investigating the time course of grammaticality judgment are presented, using sentences that vary in error type (agreement, movement, omission of function words), part of speech (auxiliaries vs. determiners) and location (early vs. late sentence placement). Experiment 1 is a word-by-word "gating" experiment, similar to the word-level gating paradigm of Grosjean (1980). Results show that some error types elicit a broad and variable "decision region" instead of a "decision point," analogous to results for word-level gating. Experiment 2 looks at on-line judgments of the same stimuli in an RSVP (Rapid Serial Visual Presentation) paradigm, with reaction times measured from several different points within each sentence based on the results of Experiment 1. Qualitatively different results are obtained depending on how and where the error point is defined. Results are discussed in terms of interaction activation models (which do not assume a single resolution point) and discrete parsing models.