Mid Ans PDF
Mid Ans PDF
Mid Ans PDF
Answers
The total number of points in this exam is 60.
So, if an exercise is worth 6 points, it makes up 10% of your total exam grade.
a) Do not dangle modifiers - a participle-based modifier phrase occurring in the beginning of a sentence, like
“Walking down Fifth Avenue, …” or “Riding a bike,…” should refer to the subject of the sentence that
follows. Prescriptive Walking down Fifth Ave, buildings seem tall
b) In a double-object sentence pronounced without any pauses, like “I gave Mary the book”, do not put
any adverbs in between the two objects. Descriptive I gave Mary gladly the book
c) In an answer to the question “Who is it?” (e.g. It’s John), use the nominative form of the pronouns (i.e., I,
he, she). Prescriptive It’s me!
Language Instinct.
2. [2 pts] Name two arguments that suggest that Behaviorism falls short of providing an explanation for the
human linguistic ability.
1 point for each of 2 distinct arguments
Any two of the following:
• Poverty of stimulus
• Children’s linguistic creativity : foots, holded
• Nicaraguan sign language – there is no stimulus to generate the response of NSL
• No primitive languages
• Converging on the same language despite difference in individual stimuli
3. [2 pts] Give two differences between the two sign languages called Lenguaje de Signos Nicaraguense and
Idioma de Signos Nicaraguense.
1 point for each of 2 distinct differences
Many examples, e.g. no agreement vs. verb agreement, iconicity vs. more
arbitrariness in signs, thematic roles (who did what to whom) indicated by sentence
structure/grammatical stuff, etc.
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Phonetics
4. [1 pt] (Multiple choice) To articulate one class of speech sounds, the tongue tip makes contact with:
a. Uvula. b. Teeth. c. Larynx. d. Epiglottis
Phonology
6. [2 pts] Consider the following pairs of words. Explain using the syllable structure diagram why native
speakers perceive the first pair as not rhyming and the second as rhyming:
[stoUn] [stoUv] [mIlk] [sIlk]
Because the rhyme portion of the syllable is the same in milk-silk, but different in stone-stove.
s
/\
o r
| /\
| nc
| | |
st o n 1 point for giving an answer that mentions “rhyme”, 1 point for correct diagrams
s
/\
o r
| /\
| nc
| | |
st o v
s
/\
o r
| /\
| nc
| | |
m I lk
s
/\
o r
| /\
| nc
| | |
s I lk
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8. [4pts] This is exercise 34 from Language Files, File 3, pp.142-143. Canadian French
In the dialect of French (an Indo-European language of the Romance family) spoken in Canada, consider the
distribution of [t] and [ts] (a voiceless alveolar affricate) in the data below.
i. State their distribution (what environments they occur in), and
ii. Determine if they are allophones of one phoneme or of separate phonemes. [y] and [Y] are
high, front, rounded vowels, tense and lax, respectively.
a. [tu] ‘all’ g. [telegram] ‘telegram’
s
b. [abut i] ‘ended’ h. [trε] ‘very’
c. [tεl] ‘such’ i. [kYltsyr] ‘culture’
d. [tεb] ‘stamp’ j. [minYt] ‘minute’
e. [tsimId] ‘timid’ k. [tsy] ‘you’
s s
f. [t It] ‘title’ l. [t Yb]‘tube’
i. The sounds [t] and [ts] are in complementary distribution, since the sound [ts] appears only
before high front vowels, while [t] occurs elsewhere. (2 points)
ii. They are allophones of the same phoneme, since they are in predictable, complementary
distribution. (2 points)
Morphology
9. [6 pts] In the following short passage, find one example of each of the following categories of
morpheme. Everything except the clitic has several possible examples in the passage:
1 point for each example
a. bound function morpheme -ed in structured, -s in entities, -er in hearer
b. bound content morpheme co- in cooperative, any root, e.g. hear- in hearer, inform- in
informational, -operate in cooperative
c. free content morpheme any, part, way…
d. free function morpheme the, a, of, …
e. a compound topic-structure, knowledge-store, information packaging
f. a clitic ’s as in hearer’s and reader’s
The management of hearer's (reader's) attention is an integral part of cooperative communication in
any language. Discourse is thus structured in a way that allows the hearer to focus his attention on
various entities evoked in the discourse (topic-structure), and to ensure that information about them
is entered into his knowledge-store in a coherent way (information packaging)...
10. [2 pts] Consider the following words: “unbelievable” “undoable”. Using tree structures explain why one
of them is ambiguous and the other is not. State which one is ambiguous. .5 point for stating which one is
ambiguous, 1.5 points for correct diagrams
Undoable is the ambiguous one, since it could be undo+able, or un+doable, as shown in the tree
diagrams below. Unbelievable is not ambiguous, since there is no verb unbelieve (meaning reverse the
believing?)
Adj Adj Adj
/ \ / \ / \
V Af Af Adj Af Adj
/\ | | / \ | / \
Af V able un V Af un V Af
| | | | | |
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11. [15] This is exercise 30 from Language Files, File 4, p.183.
Turkish
Examine the following data from Turkish and answer the questions that follows.
i. Give the Turkish morpheme that corresponds to each of the following translations: 6 points (.5 point for
each morpheme)
ii. What is the order of morphemes in a Turkish word (in terms of noun stem, plural marker, diminutive
marker “little”, possessive pronouns, and preposition-like markers)
4 points
noun + 'little' + plural marker + determiner + preposition
iii. How would one say ‘of our little hands’ in Turkish? 5 points
12. [1 pt] (Multiple choice) Based on (11) above, what morphological type of language is Turkish?
a. agglutinative b. analytic c. derivational d. head-final
Syntax
13. [1 pt] (Multiple choice) Which of the following sentences does not help to test the constituency of eat
the apples in the sentence John could eat the apples?
a.What could John do? Eat the apples!
b. John could eat them
c. John could do it
d. Eat the apples John certainly could!
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Below: no CP, “to school” is a complement, adverbs attach to V’, proper names are NPs, “I” contains a silent
[past] morpheme, a determiner is a phrase, and so is an adverb:
a) “Ate pizza John”
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d) Read that book often Peter
ii. Then, write a set of phrase structure rules that can derive all of these Sylliespeek sentences.
The main thing here is for the rules to be consistent with the trees.
The rules that will give the particular trees I’ve drawn above are these:
Phrase structure rules: Lexicon
IP --> I’ NP N --> pizza, school, man, book
I’ --> I VP V --> ate, biked, danced, read
NP --> Npr I --> [past]
NP --> DP N’ Npr --> John, Mary, Peter
N’ --> N D --> that
DP --> D’ P --> to
D’ --> D Adv --> often, yesterday
VP --> V’
V’ --> V NP
V’ --> V PP
V’ --> V’ AdvP
PP --> P’
P’ --> P NP
AdvP --> Adv’
Adv’ --> Adv