Introduction To English Syntax
Introduction To English Syntax
Syntax
2nd semester 2011
By Yusep & Fitri
Sounds of
language
Phonetics
Phonolog
y
Grammar
Morpholog
y
Syntax
Semantic
s
Meanin
g
Pragmatic
s
What is syntax?
Syntax is a branch of
linguistics that studies the
rules that govern the formation
of sentences.
Analyzing
1. a. The boy found the ball.
b. The boy found quickly.
c. The boy found in the house.
d. The boy found the ball in the house.
2. a. Sylvia slept the baby
b. Sylvia slept soundly
Grammaticality
judgments
Its determined by rules that are
shared by the speakers of language.
Words must conform to specific
patterns determined by syntactic
rules of the language.
Categories
Category refers to a group of
linguistic items which fulfill the same
or similar functions in a particular
language such as a sentence, a noun
phrase or a verb.
Word-level categories
Words can be grouped together into a
relatively small number of classes,
called syntactic categories, which
can generally substitute for one
another
without
loss
of
grammaticality.
Lexical words
It is called open (lexical) because
languages can freely add new
words to the set.
e.g.
Noun, Verb, Adjective, and
Adverb
Functional words
Its called functional words because
they carry little meaning (have no
synonyms) and typically help another
word.
e.g.
Determiner, Degree words, Qualifier,
Auxiliary,
Conjunction,
Pronoun,
Preposition
Example of Syntactic
Categories
Lexical
categories:
Noun (N)
Verb (V)
Adjective (A)
Adverb (Adv)
Examples:
moisture, policy
melt, remain
good, intelligent
slowly, now
Functional
categories:
Determiner (Det)
Degree word (Deg)
Qualifier (Qual)
Auxiliary (Aux)
Conjunction (Con)
Examples:
the, this
very, more
always, perhaps
will, can
and, or
Phrasal categories
The most commonly recognized categories:
NP : Noun Phrase
The car, a clever student
VP : Verb Phrase
study hard, play the guitar
PP : Prepositional Phrase
in the class, above the earth
AP : Adjective Phrase
very tall, quite certain
Other examples
[NP the pretty girl]
[VP often dream]
[AP very pessimistic]
[PP mainly about]
Symbols
The list of common symbols in
syntactic analysis:
S
N
V
Art
NP
VP
Adj
Sentence
Noun
Verb
Article
Noun phrase
Verb phrase
adjective
Pro
Adv
Prep
PP
Det
PN
Pronoun
Adverb
Preposition
Prep phrase
Determiner
Proper noun
NP (Det) N (PP)
PP P NP
Det
N
Det
The
PP
bus
Det
The
NP
N
bus
in
the
yard
NP
NP
took
det
the
money
Det
took
the
PP
N
money
from
NP
Det
the
bank
Adj
Aux
N
old
PP
NP
Det
The
VP
N
tree
past
swayed
in
the
wind
VP
N
V
NP
Det
PP
N
NP
Det
The
children
put
the
toy
in
Synthetic
buffalo hides
Synthetic buffalo
hides
Structural ambiguity(II)
The boy saw the man with the
telescope
S
NP
Det
Aux
N
VP
V
NP
Det
PP
N
NP
Det
The
boy
past
saw the
NP
Det
Aux
N
VP
NP
V
Det
PP
P
NP
Det
The
boy
past
saw
the
Deep structure
The basic structure of sentences
which specified by phrase structure
rules.
e.g. NP + V + NP
Same deep structure can be the
source of many other surface
structures.
For example:
The boy is sleeping
sleeping?
S
NP
Aux
Det
The
boy
VP
V
is
Sleeping
Is the boy
S
Aux
NP
Det
Is the
VP
N
boy ---
V
sleeping
Surface structure
The variant of basic sentence structures.
The structures that result from the
application of transformational rules.
Other sentence types that are
transformationally related are:
Passive sentences
The cat chased the mouse
The mouse
was chased by the cat
there sentences
A man was on the roof
man on the roof
there was a
PP preposing
The astronomer saw a meteor with his
telescope
with his telescope the
astronomer saw a meteor
Aux
VP
The boy
V
will
leave
Will
NP
VP
Det
the
boy leave
NP
NP
Conj
Det
The
cat
and
NP
Det
the
dog
Embedded sentence
It includes another sentence within
itself.
e.g.
the teacher believes the student
knows the answer
Complementizers
It introduces a complement phrase
S
NP
Det
Aux
N
VP
present
The teacher
the answer
believe
Example of complementizer
S
NP
Det
Aux
N
present V
VP
CP
the student
The Wh-movement
S
NP
Det
The
Aux
N
man
VP
NP
should repair
Det
which
car
References
Yule, J. (2010). The study of language: 4th
edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press
Fromkin, V., Rodman, R., Hyams, N.,
Collins, P. & Amberber, M. (2005). An
introduction to language: 5th edition.
Merlbourne: Nelson Thomson Learning Pty
Steinberg, D.D. (1993). An introduction to
psycholinguistics. New York: Longman