Syntax, An Introduction: Form, Meaning and Use: I Wayan Arka Yana Qomariana
Syntax, An Introduction: Form, Meaning and Use: I Wayan Arka Yana Qomariana
I Wayan Arka
Yana Qomariana
Week 1
7 February 2019
Assessments
Different
Different syntax = different meaning
structure
Also English:
• The son of Pharaoh’s daughter.
• [ The son of Pharaoh NP]’s daughter.
– The son of Pharaoh has a daughter
– i.e. Pharaoh has a granddaughter
Form Function
• Noun • person, place, thing
• Subject • ‘doer’, AGENT, A
• Object • ‘done to, PATIENT, P
• Verb • ‘doing word’
• Plural, PL • Plural
• Past tense • Past time reference
• Complex:
i. No complete grammars have ever been
written
ii. For English, the world’s most studied
language, nearest is The Cambridge
Grammar of the English Language (1,859
pages)
iii. Easy enough to find gaps in this
Ease of acquisition
AVP
APV
PAV
VPA
PVA
VAP
See WALS (World Atlas of Language Structures) for more info’:
http://wals.info/chapter/81 and http://wals.info/feature/81A#2/18.0/152.8
Syntax differs within languages
VAP/VPA
(VAP is more common in Greek)
English-like AVP is also possible:
Outline
1. Arrangement, Meaning & Syntax
2. Domain of syntax
3. Methods
i. Observation
ii. Elicitation
4. Applications
5. Course
Observation
• Build a ‘corpus’ of sentences produced by
native speakers
• Problems:
i. Need to know what they mean
ii. Some are erroneous:
All your base are belong to us.
iii. Complex patterns may fail to appear
iv. Integration problem: ‘Enough’ absence
indicates ungrammaticality. But how much is
enough?
An English Corpus:
searchable big
Building your own corpus…
Outline
1. Arrangement, Meaning & Syntax
2. Domain of Syntax
3. Typology of syntax
4. Methods
i. Observation
ii. Elicitation
5. Applications
Elicitation
• Can you say “Lots of people were at the party,
weren’t there”?
• Problems
– Fraught
– Not always possible (David Gil Working on Riau
Indonesian)
http://wwwstaff.eva.mpg.de/~gil/riau/working.html
– Or speakers might defer to investigator and accept
anything.
Elicitation
“One of my most helpful language teachers insisted
that I could say a certain sentence and that when I said
it, it was indeed ‘pretty’. However, I asked him to say it
himself... [and] he replied ‘I cannot.’ ‘Why not?’ I asked.
‘Pirahã do not talk like that’ was the puzzling reply. ‘But
you said I could say it!’ ‘Yes’, he said, ‘you can say
anything you like. You are paying me” (Dan Everett,
Language the Cultural Tool, p. 93-4)
Combinations of Methods
• Good syntacticians studying
languages: they don’t speak
natively and study observed
sentences
• A certain amount of asking (to
different degrees, depending on
personal philosophy)
Outline
1. Arrangement, Meaning & Syntax
2. General Features
3. Syntax & Learning
4. Methods
5. Applications
6. Course
Applications
• Technological:
i. Information assistants
a) IBM’s Watson
b) Apple’s Siri
ii. Web-searches
iii. Machine translation
iv. Communication with
household robots,
entertainment
systems, cars etc.
Applications
• Humanistic
i. More efficient language
teaching
ii. Viable grammar instruction in
schools (No obviously false
doctrines propagated, students
not dying of boredom)
iii. More information about
Rationalism/prescriptive vs.
Empiricism/descriptive
Summary
1. Arrangement, Meaning & Syntax
2. Domain of Syntax
– Complex, ‘easy’, productive
3. Typology of Syntax
4. Methods
– Observation & elicitation
5. Applications
– Technological, humanistic
‘A jaguar ate a pig.’
K annada synt ax
Draw the phrase structure tree for the Kannada sentence in (A). [2 point s]