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Syntax November 14, 2012. Welcome Back! Now give me your phonology homeworks!

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Presentation on theme: "Syntax November 14, 2012. Welcome Back! Now give me your phonology homeworks!"— Presentation transcript:

1 Syntax November 14, 2012

2 Welcome Back! Now give me your phonology homeworks!

3 Flashback Way back when, we talked about how it’s possible to produce infinitely long sentences in a language. Example: John said that Mary thought that Robin knew that Angela saw that Quinton wanted Sam to think that Becky heard that Steve wished that Forrest hoped that Bronwen believed that.... Idea: our knowledge of language consists of “patterns of patterns”

4 Flashback We also talked about sentences like the following... Colorless green ideas sleep furiously. I’m memorizing the score of the sonata I hope to compose someday. ‘Twas brillig, and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe… The claim was that these were “acceptable” sentences of English, even though they made no sense.

5 Flashback In contrast, the following sentences were not acceptable: Green sleep ideas furiously colorless. I’m memorizing the perform of the score I sonata to hope someday. Brillig and, slithy and the toves Wabe gimble in the gyre and did… What makes these sentences unacceptable, and the other sentences acceptable?

6 Syntax Syntax = the rules a language has for putting words together into sentences also: rules for putting words together into phrases Important terminology: grammatical = strings of words that form possible sentences of a language = conform to the syntactic rules a language has for putting words together into sentences What is grammatical is based on a native speaker’s judgment of acceptability. (descriptive grammar)

7 On the other hand Another important term: ungrammatical = string of words that is not a possible sentence in a language = cannot be produced by the syntactic rules of a language What is ungrammatical also reflects a native speaker’s judgments Symbolized with a * before a string of words: *Green sleep ideas furiously colorless.

8 Game Plan Our goal for today: Figure out some basic syntactic rules i.e., how languages put words together into larger units Let’s start with this observation: The rules for putting words together into sentences do not necessarily yield utterances that make sense. Colorless green ideas sleep furiously. Q: If syntactic rules are not based on what words mean, how do they work?

9 Lexical Categories: Distribution The rules for putting words together into sentences operate on lexical categories (word types), not word meanings. Words of each lexical category have a specific syntactic distribution: = the words that may appear around them, in their “syntactic environment” Also: there are restrictions on the inflectional affixes which may attach to them. = “morphosyntax”

10 Lexical Categories: Distribution Example: Nouns (N) Semantically: refer to persons, places and things Syntactically: 1.May occur after Determiners this book, the water, an idea *this excite, *the somber, *an exactly 2.May be modified with Adjectives this funny book, the bad water, a slippery idea Also, nouns can be plural: the dogs, the cats, *the sombers, *the exactlys

11 Lexical Categories: Distribution Verbs (V) Semantically: refer to events and states of affairs Syntactically: may appear after Auxiliaries he can go, she will stay, I have walked *he can printer, *she will strange, *I have occasionally Verbs also take specific inflectional affixes: He runs, She plays, It works. *He printers, *She stranges, *It precipitouslies. He is running, She is playing, It is working. *He is printering, *She is stranging, *It is occasionallying

12 Lexical Categories: Distribution Adjectives (Adj) Semantically: describe things that nouns refer to Syntactically: may appear after Degree Words very funny, too wet, quite slippery *very building, *too walk, *quite these Adjectives can also take specific inflectional affixes: wetter, funniest *buildinger, *walkest

13 Lexical Categories, part 1 The familiar lexical categories are “open-class” categories… It is relatively easy to add new items to the category. Nouns (N): wickedness, phonology, smock, blog… Verbs (V): eat, smash, insult, hug, chillax… Adjective (A): creepy, red, humungous, snarky… Adverb (Adv): quickly, now, sneakily… Note: many adverbs are derived from adjectives. But remember that category membership can be fluid... Ex: Calvin’s verbing of nouns

14 Lexical Categories, part 2 Other lexical categories are “closed-class” or functional categories… It is very difficult to add new items to the category. Prepositions (P): to, in, on, near, at, by… Pronouns (Pro): I, you, he, she, we, they, it… Auxiliaries (Aux): will, can, may, must, should, could… Determiner (Det): a, the, this, those, my, their… Conjunction (Con): and, but, or… Degree (Deg): too, so, very, more, quite… The meaning of these categories is harder to define; their function is to help string words in a sentence together.

15 Check it out! Words can be categorized on the basis of distributional and morphosyntactic evidence... Even if they don’t mean anything: 'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves did gyre and gimble in the wabe. All mimsy were the borogoves, And the mome raths outgrabe. Pro V A Con Det A N V V Con V P Det N Det A V Det N Con Det A N V

16 ‘Twas Brillig? “Brillig” is actually in the appropriate syntactic frame for either an adjective or a noun or a verb. “It was pleasant…” “It was evening…” “It was four in the afternoon….” So once again, we have an example of language exhibiting ambiguity.

17 A First Hypothesis How do we put words together into (grammatical) sentences? A really simple way = string one word category after another: S  Det N V Det N (  = “may consist of”) The child found a puppy. S  Det A N V P Det N The slithy toves gimbled in the wabe. These syntactic rules could capture patterns of words.

18 Important Data What’s going on in these sentences? 1. We need more intelligent leaders. 2. I like green eggs and ham. 3. The police shot the terrorists with rifles.  Syntax also puts words together in units that are smaller than sentences. These units are called phrases. Same string of words, more than one interpretation = more than one phrase structure structural ambiguity

19 Actual Newspaper Headlines One way in which syntax can enrich your life is through unintentional humor. 1.HOSPITAL SUED BY SEVEN FOOT DOCTORS 2.LAWYERS GIVE POOR FREE LEGAL ADVICE 3.ENRAGED COW INJURES FARMER WITH AX 4.COMPLAINTS ABOUT NHL REFEREES GROWING UGLY 5.CROWDS RUSH TO SEE POPE TRAMPLE MAN TO DEATH 6.FRENCH OFFER TERRORIST REWARD

20 Ambiguity (again) There are two ways to represent structural ambiguity in sentences. Method 1: Bracketing a.[more intelligent] leaders b.more [intelligent leaders] Just like morphological bracketing: [[unlock]able] [un[lockable]]

21 Ambiguity (again) Method 2: Phrase Structure Trees more intelligent leaders

22 Tree Terminology more intelligent leaders node constituents root node

23 Ambiguity (continued) Recall: in morphology, each node in a tree had to be a real word Adj AffVerbAff [un-][lock][-able] = not able to be locked

24 Ambiguity (continued) Recall: in morphology, each node in a tree had to be a real word Adj Verb AffVerbAff [un-][lock][-able] = able to be unlocked

25 Phrases The nodes in a syntactic tree above the word level represent phrases. phrase = string of words that function as a unit Basic phrase types: 1.Noun Phrases (NP): [intelligent leaders] 2.Verb Phrases (VP): [shoot terrorists] 3.Prepositional Phrases (PP): [with rifles] 4.Adjective Phrases (AP): [more intelligent]

26 Phrase Phacts Every phrase has to have at least one constituent This constituent is called the head of the phrase. The head determines the phrase’s function, behavior and category. For example, noun phrases have to consist of at least one noun. Bobthe book a picture of Boba picture of the unicorn that weird picture of Bob’s unicorn

27 In General There’s a pattern to how these things work: Noun phrases (NPs) are headed by nouns NP  N Verb phrases (VPs) are headed by verbs VP  V Prepositional phrases (PPs) are headed by prepositions PP  P Adjective phrases (AdjP) are headed by adjectives AP  A Basic Phrase Structure Rule: XP  X


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