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Syntax in Linguistic Tree. . . . . . . . . . . Linguistics. Grammar. Meaning. Sounds of language. Phonetics. Phonology. Morphology. Syntax. Semantics. Pragmatics. What is syntax?. Syntax is a branch of linguistics that studies the rules that govern the formation of sentences. . Analyzing . a. The
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1. Introduction to English Syntax 2nd semester 2011
By Fitri
2. Syntax in Linguistic Tree
3. What is syntax? Syntax is a branch of linguistics that studies the rules that govern the formation of sentences.
4. Analyzing a. The boy found the ball.
b. The boy found quickly.
c. The boy found in the house.
d. The boy found the ball in the house.
2. a. Sylvia slept the baby
b. Sylvia slept soundly
5. Grammaticality judgments It’s determined by rules that are shared by the speakers of language.
Words must conform to specific patterns determined by syntactic rules of the language.
6. Categories Category refers to a group of linguistic items which fulfill the same or similar functions in a particular language such as a sentence, a noun phrase or a verb.
7. Word-level categories Words can be grouped together into a relatively small number of classes, called syntactic categories, which can generally substitute for one another without loss of grammaticality.
8. Word-level categories are divided into:
lexical words (open class words)
Functional words (closed class words)
9. Lexical words It is called “open” (lexical) because languages can freely add new words to the set.
e.g.
Noun, Verb, Adjective, and Adverb
10. Functional words It’s called “functional” words because they carry little meaning (have no synonyms) and typically “help” another word.
e.g.
Determiner, Degree words, Qualifier, Auxiliary, Conjunction, Pronoun, Preposition
11. Example of Syntactic Categories Lexical categories:
Noun (N)
Verb (V)
Adjective (A)
Adverb (Adv) Examples:
moisture, policy
melt, remain
good, intelligent
slowly, now
12. Functional categories:
Determiner (Det)
Degree word (Deg)
Qualifier (Qual)
Auxiliary (Aux)
Conjunction (Con) Examples:
the, this
very, more
always, perhaps
will, can
and, or
13. Indicate the category of each word in the following sentences. a. The glass suddenly broke.
b. A jogger ran towards the end of the lane.
c. The peaches never appear quite ripe.
d. Gillian will play the trumpet and the drums in the orchestra.
14. Phrase categories and their structures Syntactic units that are built around a certain word category are called phrases, the category of which is determined by the word category around which the phrase is built.
15. E.g. if the word around which the phrase is built is a noun, then the phrase is a noun phrase.
e.g.
the car, a clever student
16. Phrasal categories The most commonly recognized categories:
NP : Noun Phrase
The car, a clever student
VP : Verb Phrase
study hard, play the guitar
PP : Prepositional Phrase
in the class, above the earth
AP : Adjective Phrase
very tall, quite certain
17. Other examples [NP the pretty girl]
[VP often dream]
[AP very pessimistic]
[PP mainly about]
18. Phrase Structure Rules(I) The phrase structure rule for NP, VP, AP and PP (example):
NP?(Det) N (PP) …
VP?(Qual) V (NP) …
AP?(Deg) A (PP) …
PP?(Deg) P (NP) …
19. Symbols The list of common symbols in syntactic analysis:
20. Phrase structure rules (II)
Det N
Det N PP
The bus P NP
Det N
The bus in the yard
21. Phrase structure rules (III)
det N
22. Draw the tree diagram! 1. repaired the telephone
2. the success of the program
3. a film about pollution
4. move towards the window
5. cast a spell on the broomstick
23. The main structure rules 1. S ? NP (Aux) VP
2. NP ? (Det) (AP) N (PP)
3. VP ? V (NP) (PP) (Adv)
4. PP ? P NP
5. AP ? A (PP)
24.
S
NP Aux VP
Det Adj N V PP
P NP
Det N
The old tree past swayed in the wind
e.g. The old tree swayed in the wind
25. The children put the toy in the box
26. Structural ambiguity (I)
27. Ambiguities often lead to humorous results:
For sale: an antique desk suitable for lady with thick legs and large drawers.
? what does “thick legs and large drawers” refer to?
The desk or the lady?
28. Structural ambiguity(II) The boy saw the man with the telescope
29. Structural ambiguity (III)The boy saw the man with the telescope
30. Draw two phrase structure trees representing the two meanings of the sentence:
The magician touched the child with the wand.
Be sure you indicate which meaning goes with which tree.
31. Deep structure The basic structure of sentences which specified by phrase structure rules.
e.g. NP + V + NP
Same deep structure can be the source of many other surface structures.
32. For example:
The boy is sleeping Is the boy sleeping?
S
NP Aux VP
Det N V
The boy is Sleeping
33.
S
Aux NP VP
Det N V
Is the boy --- sleeping
34. Example of same deep structure:
Charlie broke the window
It was Charlie who broke the window
Was the window broken by Charlie?
35. Surface structure The variant of basic sentence structures.
The structures that result from the application of transformational rules.
Other sentence types that are transformationally related are:
Passive sentences
The cat chased the mouse The mouse was chased by the cat
36. ‘there’ sentences
A man was on the roof there was a man on the roof
PP preposing
The astronomer saw a meteor with his telescope with his telescope the astronomer saw a meteor
37. Example of deep & surface Structures
38. Draw the deep & surface structure of the following sentences:
Will the boss hire Hillary?
Is that player leaving the team?
Who should the director call?
What is Joanne eating?
39. More phrase structure rules Coordinate structure
A coordinate structure results when two constituents of the same category are joined with a conjunction, such as and or or.
e.g
40. NP
NP Conj NP
Det N Det N
The cat and the dog
41. Embedded sentence
It includes another sentence within itself.
e.g.
the teacher believes the student knows the answer
Complementizers
It introduces a complement phrase
42. S
NP Aux VP
Det N present V S
The teacher believe the student knows the answer
43. Example of complementizer S
NP Aux VP
Det N present V CP
C S
The teacher believes that the student knows the answer
44. The Wh-movement
45. References Yule, J. (2010). The study of language: 4th edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Fromkin, V., Rodman, R., Hyams, N., Collins, P. & Amberber, M. (2005). An introduction to language: 5th edition. Merlbourne: Nelson Thomson Learning Pty
Steinberg, D.D. (1993). An introduction to psycholinguistics. New York: Longman