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Syntax

Syntax. A Review of General Language Etiquette. Original Draft , Wu Hepen, Northwest Normal School. Modified: Dr. Thomas. Eaton, 2009. Key Points Highlighted. Syntax Types of Grammar American structuralism and its brief history IC Analysis Syntactic Categories Lexical Categories

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Syntax

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  1. Syntax A Review of General Language Etiquette Original Draft, Wu Hepen, Northwest Normal School Modified: Dr. Thomas. Eaton, 2009 © BTexact Technologies 2001

  2. Key Points Highlighted • Syntax • Types of Grammar • American structuralism and its brief history • IC Analysis • Syntactic Categories • Lexical Categories • Chomsky and UG © BTexact Technologies 2001

  3. Syntax • Syntax: the study of the structure of sentences and the grammatical rules governing the way words are combined to form sentences. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  4. Types of Grammar • Prescriptive Grammar • Descriptive Grammar • Universal Grammar © BTexact Technologies 2001

  5. Prescriptive Grammar Traditional Grammar and the prescriptive approach: Grammar as ‘linguistic etiquette’, i.e. the identification of the best/proper structures to be used; © BTexact Technologies 2001

  6. Descriptive Grammatical Rules • Descriptive rules are more general and more basic than prescriptive rules in the sense that all sentences of a language are formed in accordance with them, not just the subset of sentences that count as correct or socially acceptable. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  7. Prescriptive Rules • Grammar is a collection of rules concerning what counts as socially acceptable and unacceptable language use. These rules in question primarily concern the proper composition of sentences in written language. • Don’t start a sentence with a conjunction • Don’t end a sentence with a preposition • Don’t use sentence fragments • Don’t use dangling participles • Don’t use a plural pronoun to refer back to a singular noun; etc. • e.g. Over there is the guy who I went to the party with © BTexact Technologies 2001

  8. Descriptive Grammar • Rules of descriptive grammar have the status of scientific observations, and they are intended as insightful generalizations about the way that human language is used in fact, rather than about how it ought to be used. • Articles precede the nouns they belong to • Relative clauses follow the noun that they modify • Prepositions precede their objects © BTexact Technologies 2001

  9. Grammatical sentences • An ungrammatical sentence is conventionally prefixed with an asterisk (*) while the grammatical sentences are usually not specifically marked. • ( ) Over there is guy the who I went to party the with • ( )Over there is the man I went to the party with guy • ( )Over there is the guy who I went to the party with • ( )Over there is the guy with whom I went to the party © BTexact Technologies 2001

  10. Prescriptive vs. Descriptive • Rules of etiquette or laws of society • Rules about correct or socially accepted sentences • Rules explicitly taught • Based on the more favored variants • …The verb SHOULD agree in number with the logical subject • There’s some boxes left on the porch • There are some boxes left on the porch • Rules about all sentences of a language • Rules followed effortlessly and consistently • Document all variants without discrimination • …the verb CAN agree in number with EITHER the expletive subject OR with the logical subject © BTexact Technologies 2001

  11. Universal Grammar • Grammar as a form of internal linguistic knowledge that operates in the appropriate production and comprehension of natural languages. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  12. Goals of a theory of grammar • Universality: a theory of grammar should provide us with the tools needed to describle the grammar of any natural language adequately. • Descriptive adequacy: a grammar of a given language has descriptive adequacy if it explains observed language data and the intuitions of native speakers about the grammaticality of sentences of a language • Explanatory adequacy: a theory of grammar has explanatory adequacy if it explains how native speakers of a language can arrive at the knowledge of that language. • Learnability: an adequate linguistic theory must provide adequate grammars which are learnable by young children in a relatively short period of time. i.e., it must account for the uniformity and rapidity of language acquisition, given the poverty of stimulus. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  13. American Structuralism • A brief history • How is descriptive linguistics done? • IC Analysis © BTexact Technologies 2001

  14. American Structuralism: A brief history • Descriptive linguistics is the study and analysis of spoken language. The techniques of descriptive linguistics were devised by German American anthropologist Franz Boas and American linguist and anthropologist Edward Sapir in the early 1900s to record and analyze Native American languages. • Franz Boas: Handbook of American Indian Languages (1911 • He saw grammar as a description of how human speech in a language is organized. A descriptive grammar should describe the relationships of speech elements in words and sentences. • Leonard Bloomfield, • best known for his commitment to linguistics as an independent science and his insistence on using scientific procedures. • His major work, Language (1933) is regarded as the classic text of structural linguistics, also called structuralism. • Norm Chomsky • had studied structural linguistics, was seeking a way to analyze the syntax of English in a structural grammar. • This effort led him to see grammar as a theory of language structure rather than a description of actual sentences. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  15. How is descriptive linguistics done? • A corpus of data • Segmentation • Identification of the phonemes • Which phonemes can combine to form morphemes • How morphemes combine into phrases and sentences. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  16. IC analysis • The basic concern of the descriptive approach is to investigate the distribution of forms in a language. The method used is one of substitution. • Constituent: a grammatical unit which is part of a larger grammatical unit -- e.g., sentence = noun phrase + verb phrase; noun phrase = determiner + noun; "subject", ”verb", "determiner" and "noun" etc. are constituents • IC analysis is designed to show how small constituents in a sentence combine to form larger constituents. • My || parents | bought ||| two tickets || at ||| Christmas. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  17. More exercises on IC analysis • Colorless green ideas sleep furiously • John found a fly in the soup • the young king who gave up his throne • the man from the city in the little country from Western Europe © BTexact Technologies 2001

  18. Labelled Tree Diagram and Bracketing • Three aspects of a speaker’s syntactic knowledge are explicitly represented in tree diagrams: • The linear order of the words in the sentence • The groupings of words into syntactic categories • The hierarchical structure of the syntactic categories © BTexact Technologies 2001

  19. Syntactic categories • A family of expressions that can substitute for one another without loss of grammaticality is called a syntactic category. • The cat chases the mouse. • The dog chases the mouse • The policeman chases the mouse. • The mother mouse chases the mouse. • If words and phrases could not be assigned to a small group of categories, it would be very hard to learn or use a language. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  20. Syntax: Lexical Categories • Lexical Categories: • every word is a member of a category. • a word’s category type determines the kind of phrase it can form • a phrase is a word or string of words that functions as a unit in a sentence, built around a head • Every language has specific phrase structure rules determining how phrases can be combined to form sentences © BTexact Technologies 2001

  21. Syntax: Lexical Categories • Noun (N): • real, imaginary, abstract things • In English, if nouns refer to countable things, the regular plural is made by suffixing -s/-es • In English they can be paired with articles and demonstratives • EX: the book, this book, that book, etc. • In English they can be modified with descriptive words (adjectives) © BTexact Technologies 2001

  22. Noun Phrases (NP) • Evidence that NPs are syntactic units comes from the fact they can often be replaced by a single word such as the pronoun they orit • The students read the controversial book. • The students read it. • *The students read the controversial it. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  23. Syntax: Lexical Categories • Verb (V): • refer to states of affairs and events • express time, in most languages take a specific forms corresponding to the time of the event • EX English: walk expresses past by adding -ed • express manner (aspect) of event, in many languages take a specific form corresponding to the completedness of event. • EX English: walk expresses ongoing action by adding -ing © BTexact Technologies 2001

  24. Verbal Phrase (VP) • Evidence that VPs are syntactic units comes from the fact they can often be replaced by the word(s) did (it). • The catcher dropped the ball, and the pitcher did (it) too. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  25. Syntax: Lexical Categories • Preposisions (P): Express roles • Instrument • EX Eng: with, He cut the bread with the knife • Possessor • EX Eng: of, Monday is the best day of the week. • Spatial, directional and Temporal relations • EX English: The food was on the table before it fell to the floor. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  26. Prepositional Phrase • The substitution test confirms that PP is a unit since it can be replaced by a single word like there. • The team practiced in the park, and Lisa practised there, too. • *The team practiced in the park, and Lisa practised there the park, too. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  27. Syntax: Lexical Categories • Adjectjective (A): • describe things that nouns refer to • In English can be used in a sentence with the verb be: • EX English: He is happy. They should be ripe. • In English can be modified with degree adverbs: • EX English: He is very happy. They should be completely ripe. • In English have comparative form by adding -er: • EX English: happi-errip-er © BTexact Technologies 2001

  28. Adjectival Phrases (AP) • An adjectival phrase can be replaced by the word so. • Linda is very intelligent, and Mark appears so too. • * Linda is very intelligent, and Mark appears very so too. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  29. Syntax: Lexical Categories • Adverbs (Adv): • Manner of action • Ex Eng: quickly, He ran quickly. • Attitude of speaker • EX Eng: unfortunately, Unfortunately,he cut the bread. • Temporal frequency • EX Eng: soon, They’ll be here soon. • Can be modified by “very” in English © BTexact Technologies 2001

  30. Syntax definitions, cont. Determiner: a closed set of morphemes that “specify” nouns, indicating definiteness or indefiniteness. Includes articles plus other morphemes (a, an, the those, these, many,most, some) Degree word: very, completely (type of adverb) © BTexact Technologies 2001

  31. Lexical categories © BTexact Technologies 2001

  32. Syntax definitions, cont. Head (of a phrase): The constituent fundamental to the phrase, from which the phrase derives its name. (e.g. a noun phrase is “headed” by a noun). Each phrase (NP, VP, etc) is the projection of the head. NP is headed by N VP is headed by V, etc. Complement: The other constituents contained in the phrase that complete its meaning is called complements. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  33. General Phrase Structure (XP) • Key Points Highlighted © BTexact Technologies 2001

  34. More exercises: tree-diagram or bracket the following the structures • The teacher put the answers on the board • He ran towards the red post • Colorless green ideas sleep furiously • John found a fly in the soup • the young king who gave up his throne • the man from the city in the little country from Western Europe © BTexact Technologies 2001

  35. Chomsky and UG • Chomskyan revolution • Universal Grammar (UG) • A historical review of UG • From PS rules to X-bar theory • Parameters and Cross-linguistic Variation • From Transformation to Movement • UG and language acquisition © BTexact Technologies 2001

  36. Chomskyan revolution • Chomsky, • has attracted worldwide attention with his ground-breaking research into the nature of human language and communication. • has become the center of a debate that transcends formal linguistics to embrace psychology, philosophy, and even genetics. • his "formulation of 'transformational grammar' has been acclaimed as one of the major achievements of the century. • his work has been compared to the unraveling of the genetic code of the DNA molecule." • his discoveries have had an impact "on everything from the way children are taught foreign languages to what it means when we say that we are human." • is also an impassioned critic of American foreign policy, especially as it affects ordinary citizens of Third World nations. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  37. Central Claims • Main features of TG Grammar • Chomsky’s TG Grammar differs from the structural grammar in a number of ways: • (1) rationalism; • (2) innateness; • (3) deductive methodology; • (4) formalization; • (5) emphasis on linguistic competence; • (6) strong generative powers; • (7) emphasis on linguistic universals. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  38. Universal Grammar • Knowledge of Language • Lexicon -Grammar • Knowledge of words -Knowledge of rules • Learned -Innate • Language specific -Language Universal • Universal Grammar • The grammar which characterizes the innate predisposition to learn language. UG is a set of rules that all human possess by virtue of having certain common genetic features which sitinguish them from other species. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  39. A historical review of UG • 50-60s • Standard theory • Extended Standard Theory • Rule-based • 80s • Government and Binding Theory • Principle and Parameter Theory (PPT) • Principle-guided • 90s • Minimalism Program • Economy-driven © BTexact Technologies 2001

  40. Generative-Tranformational Grammar • TG developed in the 1950s in the context of “cognitive revolution”, which marked a shift of focus from a concern with human behaviour to the mental processes underlying human behaviour. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  41. Deep Structure and Surface Structure © BTexact Technologies 2001

  42. Principle and Parameter Theory • knowledge of language comprises a lexicon, together with a set of innate principles (that means, X-bar Theory, -Theory and Case Theory, etc.) and set parameters. •  Principle and Parameter (P&P) approach has proved fruitful for • constraining the core of innate grammatical knowledge (Pprinciples) • defining the differences found between individual languages (parameters) • describing diachronic change (parameter resetting) and • the investigation of first and second language acquisition (parameter setting and resetting). • . © BTexact Technologies 2001

  43. Minimalism Program • Central Claims • Language is basically simple • The working hypothesis is that there should not be any redundant elements in a linguistic theory and that the computational system of language (CHL) operates optimally. • CHL is so designed that its outputs are naturally ‘well-formed’ and ‘economical’. • the minimisation of linguistic levels; • the economy principles of derivation and representation. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  44. From PS-Rules to X-bar Theory • PS-rules • set up the general configurations of the phrasal structures of a language • the arragement of the elements that make up a phrase • Rewrite rules • S NP VP • NP (Det) N (PP) • VP (Aux) V (NP) • AP (Deg) A (PP) • PP (Adv) P (NP) • CP (Spec) C S © BTexact Technologies 2001

  45. Tests of Phrase Structure • Substitution • The cow attacked him (the man with the gun) • The cow attacked him (the man) with it (the gun) • Q: Who attacked the man with a gun? A: The cow did. (attacked the man with a gun) What did he do? Run up the hill and up the mountain. *Ring up his mother and up his sister. • Deletion • The cow was planning to. (attack the man with the gun) © BTexact Technologies 2001

  46. Tests of phrase structures • Movement • The cow will attack whoever is in the field. • Whoever is in the field, the cow will attack • Who will the cow attack (the man with a gun)? • Who will the cow attack (the man) with a gun? • What will the cow attack the man with (the gun)? © BTexact Technologies 2001

  47. Syntax definitions, cont. Head (of a phrase): The constituent fundamental to the phrase, from which the phrase derives its name. (e.g. a noun phrase is “headed” by a noun). Each phrase (NP, VP, etc) is the projection of the head. NP is headed by N VP is headed by V, etc. Complement: The other constituents contained in the phrase that complete its meaning is called complements. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  48. Generalizing the rules • S NP VP • XP (Specifier) X (Complement) • where X = {N, V, A, P, etc} • Fundamental insight about the architecture of sentence structrure: • Sentences do not simply consist of word strings. Rather, within any sentence, words are grouped together to form phrases, which then combine with each other to form still larger phrase. © BTexact Technologies 2001

  49. General Phrase Structure –X’ category • According to this viewpoint, all phrases have the tri-level structures as shown in the tree diagram, in which the head and its complement form an X’-level constituent and the specifier is attached at the higher XP level. • The existence of X’ categories can be verified with the help of the same sort of tests for phrase structure • Deletion tests • Substitution tests • Movements tests © BTexact Technologies 2001

  50. © BTexact Technologies 2001

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