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 2003 CSLI Publications Ling 566 Oct 16, 2007 How the Grammar Works.

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Presentation on theme: " 2003 CSLI Publications Ling 566 Oct 16, 2007 How the Grammar Works."— Presentation transcript:

1  2003 CSLI Publications Ling 566 Oct 16, 2007 How the Grammar Works

2  2003 CSLI Publications 2 Overview What we’re trying to do The pieces of our grammar Two extended examples Reflection on what we’ve done, what we still have to do

3  2003 CSLI Publications 3 Objectives Develop a theory of knowledge of language Represent linguistic information explicitly enough to distinguish well-formed from ill-formed expressions Be parsimonious, capturing linguistically significant generalizations. Why Formalize? To formulate testable predictions To check for consistency To make it possible to get a computer to do it for us What We’re Trying To Do

4  2003 CSLI Publications 4 The Components of Our Grammar Grammar rules Lexical entries Principles Type hierarchy (very preliminary, so far) Initial symbol (S, for now) We combine constraints from these components. Q What says we have to combine them? A The definition of well-formed structure How We Construct Sentences

5  2003 CSLI Publications 5 A cat slept. Can we build this with our tools? Given the constraints our grammar puts on well-formed sentences, is this one? An Example

6  2003 CSLI Publications 6 Is this a fully specified description? What features are unspecified? How many word structures can this entry license? Lexical Entry for a

7  2003 CSLI Publications 7 Which feature paths are abbreviated? Is this a fully specified description? What features are unspecified? How many word structures can this entry license? Lexical Entry for cat

8  2003 CSLI Publications 8 Effect of Principles: the SHAC

9  2003 CSLI Publications Description of Word Structures for cat

10  2003 CSLI Publications 10 Description of Word Structures for a

11  2003 CSLI Publications 11 Building a Phrase

12  2003 CSLI Publications 12 Constraints Contributed by Daughter Subtrees

13  2003 CSLI Publications 13 Constraints Contributed by the Grammar Rule

14  2003 CSLI Publications 14 A Constraint Involving the SHAC

15  2003 CSLI Publications 15 Effects of the Valence Principle

16  2003 CSLI Publications 16 Effects of the Head Feature Principle

17  2003 CSLI Publications 17 Effects of the Semantic Inheritance Principle

18  2003 CSLI Publications 18 Effects of the Semantic Compositionality Principle

19  2003 CSLI Publications 19 Is the Mother Node Now Completely Specified?

20  2003 CSLI Publications 20 Lexical Entry for slept

21  2003 CSLI Publications 21 Another Head-Specifier Phrase HSR SHAC Val Prin HFP SIP SCP Key

22  2003 CSLI Publications Is this description fully specified?

23  2003 CSLI Publications Does the top node satisfy the initial symbol?

24  2003 CSLI Publications 24 Initial Symbol (Ch 6 version)

25  2003 CSLI Publications 25 RESTR of the S node

26  2003 CSLI Publications 26 Another Example

27  2003 CSLI Publications 27 Head Features from Lexical Entries

28  2003 CSLI Publications 28 Head Features from Lexical Entries, plus HFP

29  2003 CSLI Publications Valence Features: Lexicon, Rules, and the Valence Principle Lexicon Val. Prin. Rules Key

30  2003 CSLI Publications Required Identities: Grammar Rules

31  2003 CSLI Publications Two Semantic Features: the Lexicon & SIP

32  2003 CSLI Publications 32 RESTR Values and the SCP

33  2003 CSLI Publications 33 An Ungrammatical Example What’s wrong with this sentence?

34  2003 CSLI Publications 34 An Ungrammatical Example What’s wrong with this sentence? So what?

35  2003 CSLI Publications 35 An Ungrammatical Example The Valence Principle

36  2003 CSLI Publications 36 An Ungrammatical Example Head Specifier Rule ← contradiction →

37  2003 CSLI Publications 37 Exercise in Critical Thinking Our grammar has come a long way since Ch 2, as we've added ways of representing different kinds of information: generalizations across categories semantics particular linguistic phenomena: valence, agreement, modification What else might we add? What facts about language are as yet unrepresented in our model?

38  2003 CSLI Publications 38 Overview What we’re trying to do The pieces of our grammar Two extended examples Reflection on what we’ve done, what we still have to do Next time: Review


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