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Lexical Categories. LI 2013 Nathalie F. Martin. Contemporary Linguistics Analysis : p. 146-150. Syntactic Categories. Categories of words Distinguishing categories: Meaning Inflection Distribution. Making Sense of It All!. What is the syntactic category of: Brillig
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Lexical Categories LI 2013 Nathalie F. Martin
Contemporary Linguistics Analysis: p. 146-150. Syntactic Categories Categories of words Distinguishing categories: Meaning Inflection Distribution
Making Sense of It All! • What is the syntactic category of: • Brillig • Slithy • Toves* • Gyre* • Gimble* • Wabe* • Mimsy • Borogroves • Mome • Raths • Outgrabe • Which are English words? Why is it important that those words remain there?
Syntactic Categories • = Word Classes = Parts of Speech • All languages have syntactic categories. The syntactic category of a word determines the role it can play in a sentence. • Only a noun can complete the sentence “Give a __________ to me.”
Lexical categories Noun (N) Verb (V) Adjective (A) Preposition (P) Adverb (Adv) Clearly identifiable meanings! Examples moisture, policy melt, remain good, intelligent to, near slowly, now Syntactic Categories (1)
Non-lexical categories Determiner (Det) Degree word (Deg) Auxiliary (Aux) Conjunction (Con) Functional words! Examples the, this very, more will, can and, or Syntactic Categories (2)
Lexical Categories of Words • Nouns • Verbs • Adjectives • Adverbs • Prepositions * • Lexical Categories • Non-Lexical Categories • Determiner • Degree words • Auxiliary • Conjunctions
TRICKS! Distinguishing Categories • By meaning: • Nouns = entities (people, things), including individuals (Harry, Sue), objects (book, desk), • Verbs = actions (run, jump), sensations (feel, hurt), and states (be, remain) • Adjectives: Properties and attributes of a noun. • Adverbs: • Properties and attributes of the actions, sensations, and states (verbs) • Manner and time • What about words like: likelihood, give a push, near, etc.
Distinguishing Categories • Native speakers may have a good intuition about the syntactic category of a word. • But linguists require more objective ways of determining syntactic categories. • There are two tests one can use: • Inflection • Distribution
Test 1: Inflection • Certain inflectional paradigms apply only to one syntactic category. • For example, if a word can take the inflectional suffix -ed in English, it must belong to the verb category. • Lets try in out: • The cute cat dances. • You think the end is near. • What about these words: sing (-ed*), intelligent (-er*), knowledge(-s*), etc.
Test 2: Distribution • The words with which a word may co-occur can be used to determine its syntactic category. • Example: only nouns can come after a or the in English. • All languages have such distributional restrictions on syntactic categories. • Lets try in out: • Great joy is to come in the morning. • Joy comes later today. • Holidays are the best!
Distribution tests – Rules of other languages • Distribution tests for syntactic categories are different in all languages. • Chinese has no articles like a, the. So you can’t test for nouns with them. • But in Chinese, only nouns co-occur with “classifiers”. If a word can come after a classifier, it must be a noun.
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. Det / N / Adv / V Det / N / V / P / Det / N / P / Det / N Det / N / Adv / V / Deg / A N / Aux / V / Det / N / Conj / Det / N / P / Det / N
Translation and Lexical Categories What Got LostIn Translation? Found on my heater: