Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Syntax
Syntax is the study of the part of the human
linguistic system that determines how
sentences are put together out of words.
Syntactic rules in a grammar account for
the grammaticality of sentences, and the
ordering of words and morphemes.
Syntax
Syntax involves
our knowledge of structural ambiguity
our knowledge that sentences may be
paraphrases of each other
our knowledge of the grammatical function
of each part of a sentence, that is, of the
grammatical relations.
Syntax
It is also concerned with speakers' ability to
produce and understand an infinite set of possible
sentences.
The sentence is regarded the highest-ranking unit
of grammar, and therefore that the purpose of a
grammatical description is to define, making use
of whatever descriptive apparatus that may be
necessary (rules, categories, etc).
Sentence
Clause
Phrase/Group
Word
Morpheme
Sentence Structure
One aspect of the syntactic structure of
sentences is the division of a sentence into
phrases, and those phrases into further
phrases, and so forth. Another aspect of the
syntactic structure of a sentence is
"movement" relations that hold between one
syntactic position in a sentence and another.
Constituents
A unit forming part of a larger structure
Chalker and Weiner 1998
Although the term string is often used technically to refer
to sequences of words, sentences are not merely strings of
words in a permissible order and making sense.
They are structured into successive components, consisting
of single words or groups of words. These groups and
single words are called constituents (i.e. structural units),
and when they are considered as part of the successive
unraveling of a sentence, they are known as its immediate
constituents.
Constituents
When we consider sentence My friend came home late last
night, we find out that it consists of seven word arranged in
a particular order.
In syntax, the seven words in this model sentence are its
ultimate constituents. This sentence and in general any
sentence of the language may be represented as a particular
arrangement of the ultimate constituents, which are the
minimal grammatical elements, of which the sentence is
composed.
Every sentence has therefore what we will refer to as a
linear structure. The small units are known as its
immediate constituents.
construction
A construction is a relationship between constituents.
Constructions are divided into two types: endocentric
constructions and exocentric constructions.
Endocentric construction is one whose distribution is
functionally equivalent to that of one or more of its
constituents. A word or a group of words acts as a
definable center or head.
Exocentric construction refers to a group of syntactically
related words where none of the words is functionally
equivalent to the group as a whole. There is no definable
center or head inside the group.
Endocentric Construction
Some types of phrase contain a HEAD word
and have the same formal function in their
clause as the single head would:
Too dreadful
Rather more surprisingly
She who must be obeyed
Exocentric Construction
Containing no element that is functionally
equivalent to the whole structure (non-headed or
unheaded)
Some phrases are always exocentric
The boy stood on the burning deck.
Who was the man in the iron mask?
A basic English sentence (consisting of subject and
predicate) is always exocentric, since neither part
can stand for the whole:
Syntactic Rules
Three universal basic syntactic rules:
Linear order of constituents
Categorization of constituents
Grouping of constituents into constituent
structures
Sentence Types
Sentences in any language are constructed from a rather
small set of basic structural patterns and through certain
processes involving the expansion or transformation of
these basic patterns.
When we consider sentence types from another
perspective, it can be shown that each of the longer
sentences of a language (and these are in the majority
usually) is structured in the same way as one of a
relatively small number of short sentences which are
impossible to reduce to a short form.
These short sentences have the basic sentence types. There
are different ways of dealing with sentence types.
Sentence Types
The structure of every sentence is a
lesson in logic.
John Stuart Mill
Simple Sentence
Coordinate Sentence
Complex Sentence
Simple Sentence
Coordinate Sentence
(Compound Sentence)
Complex Sentence
A complex sentence is composed of two
clauses with one holding main status
(matrix clause) and the other
incorporated or embedded into it
(embedded clause), which is often
introduced by a subordinator (who, that,
though, when, because, as, since,
although)
Mark denied that Dora yelled.
The murderer escaped when the police
arrived at the scene.
Syntactic Function
The traditional approach to syntactic function
identifies constituents of the sentence, states the
part of speech each word belongs to, describes the
inflexion involved, and explains the relationship
each
word
related
to
the
others.
According to its relation to other constituents, a
constituent may serve certain syntactic function in
a clause.
C
D
Tree Diagrams
Who climbs the Grammar-Tree distinctly knows
Where Noun and Verb and Participle grows.
John Dryden
Joyce Kilmer
Dominance
1. VP node dominates all the other nodes.
2. VP node immediately dominates the nodes labeled
V and PP.
Precedence
1. V node precedes the nodes labeled PP, P, NP,
det, and N as well as in, the and house.
2. V node immediately precedes the PP, P and
in.
Grammatical Categories:
Number and Gender
Number is a grammatical category for the analysis
of such contrasts as singular and plural of certain
word classes. In English, number is a feature of
nouns and verbs.
Gender demonstrates such contrasts as "masculine,
feminine, and neuter", and "animate: inanimate",
etc. for the analysis of certain word classes. In
most languages, grammatical gender has little to
do with the biological sex. For instance, in French,
the moon, which has nothing to do with the
biological sex, is grammatically feminine.
Case
Inflectional category, basically of nouns, which
typically marks their role in relation to other parts
of the sentence.
The case category is often used in the analysis of
word classes to identify the syntactic relationship
between words in a sentence.
Chomskyan Syntax
Syntax is seen to be a fundamental principle for
encoding and decoding meaning and is the part of
grammar shared by speakers and listeners in
communication. In 1957, the American linguist
Chomsky
proposed
the
transformationalgenerative grammar (TG), thus providing a model
for the description of human languages. The goal
of TG is to find out a system of rules to account
for the linguistic competence of native speakers of
a language to form grammatical sentences.
Chomskyan Syntax
It is called "transformational-generative"
grammar because it attempts to do two
things:
to provide the rules that can be used to
generate grammatical sentences
how basic sentences can be transformed
into either synonymous phrases or more
complex sentences.