Syntax Powerpoint
Syntax Powerpoint
2 Syntax: The
Sentence Patterns of
Language
– 1. The captain ordered the old men and the old women off the ship
– 2. The captain ordered the old men and the women of any age off
the ship
– 1. The captain ordered the [old [men and women]] off the ship
– 2. The captain ordered the [old men] and [women] off the ship
What the Syntax Rules
Do
• These groupings can be shown hierarchically in a tree
• These trees reveal the structural ambiguity in the phrase “old men and
women”
– Catcher: “Watch out for this guy, he’s a great fastball hitter.”
– Pitcher: “No problem. There’s no way I’ve got a great fastball.”
What Grammaticality
Is Not Based On
• People can judge grammaticality without ever having heard
the sentence before
– 1. “stand alone test”: if a group of words can stand alone, they form a
constituent
– VPs must always contain a verb but may also contain other constituents
such as a noun phrase or a prepositional phrase (PP)
Syntactic Categories
• Phrasal categories: NP, VP, PP, AdjP, AdvP
• Lexical categories:
• Functional categories:
– S dominates everything
S NP VP
NP Det N
VP V NP
Phrase Structure Trees and
Rules
• But, a VP could also contain:
– A verb only: The woman laughed.
– A PP: The woman laughed in the garden.
– A CP: The man said that the woman laughed.
• NP NP PP allows for the sentence: I saw the man with the telescope in a box.
• VP VP PP allows for a sentence like: The girl walked down the street in the
rain.
– …or a CP containing a S…
NP Det N’
N’ Adj N
N’ N
Recursive Adjectives and
Possessives
• Possessor NPs such as in the girl’s shoes function as a
determiner with the ‘s representing possession (poss)
– The head of a phrase names the phrase (e.g. the noun is the head of a
noun phrase, a verb is the head of a verb phrase, etc.)
– Every phrase has a head, but may or may not take a complement, or
sister category
• For example, a VP will have a head (a verb) and may take a complement such
as an NP or a CP
Heads and
Complements: Selection
• Some heads require a certain type of complement and
some don’t
– 1. the XP
– 2. the specifier (modifier)
– 3. X’ with head X and a
complement
What Heads the
Sentence
• We can now add the rule VP Aux VP into our PS rules
• The “Move Aux” rule: Move the highest Aux to adjoin to (the root)
S.
• When the Aux is moved, this results in a gap in the tree, which is
represented by a “__”
– Active to passive
• The cat chased the mouse. The mouse was chased
by the cat.
– there sentences
• There was a man on the roof. A man was on the roof.
– PP preposing
• The astronomer saw the quasar with the telescope.
With the telescope, the astronomer saw the quasar.
The Structural Dependency
of Rules
• Transformations are structure-dependent, which
means they act on phrase structures without
caring what words are in the structures
– PP preposing can be applied to any PP if it is immediately
dominated by a VP