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Syntax Powerpoint

This document discusses syntax and sentence structure. It defines syntax as the rules for forming sentences, including word order and grammatical relationships. Sentences are composed of constituents, which are groups of words that function together. Constituents can be tested through tests like replacing the group with a pronoun. Phrase structure rules specify how words combine into phrases and sentences through trees. Recursive rules allow phrases to contain themselves, generating an infinite number of sentences. The document provides examples of syntactic categories like nouns and verbs, as well as phrase structure trees illustrating sentence structure.
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
687 views

Syntax Powerpoint

This document discusses syntax and sentence structure. It defines syntax as the rules for forming sentences, including word order and grammatical relationships. Sentences are composed of constituents, which are groups of words that function together. Constituents can be tested through tests like replacing the group with a pronoun. Phrase structure rules specify how words combine into phrases and sentences through trees. Recursive rules allow phrases to contain themselves, generating an infinite number of sentences. The document provides examples of syntactic categories like nouns and verbs, as well as phrase structure trees illustrating sentence structure.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 46

Ch.

2 Syntax: The
Sentence Patterns of
Language

An Introduction to Language (9e, 2009)


by Victoria Fromkin, Robert Rodman
and Nina Hyams
Syntax
• Any speaker of any human language can produce
and understand an infinite number of possible
sentences

• Thus, we can’t possibly have a mental dictionary


of all the possible sentences

• Rather, we have the rules for forming sentences


stored in our brains

– Syntax is the part of grammar that pertains to a


speaker’s knowledge of sentences and their structures
What the Syntax Rules
Do
• The rules of syntax combine words into phrases and
phrases into sentences

• They also specify the correct word order for a language

– For example, English is a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) language


• The President nominated a new Supreme Court justice
• *President the new Supreme justice Court a nominated

• They also describe the relationship between the


meaning of a group of words and the arrangement of
the words

– I mean what I say vs. I say what I mean


What the Syntax Rules
Do
• The rules of syntax also specify the grammatical relations of a
sentence, such as the subject and the direct object

– Your dog chased my cat vs. My cat chased your dog

• Syntax rules specify constraints on sentences based on the


verb of the sentence

*The boy found *Disa slept the baby


*The boy found in the house Disa slept
The boy found the ball Disa slept soundly

Zack believes Robert to be a gentleman


*Zack believes to be a gentleman
Zack tries to be a gentleman
*Zack tries Robert to be a gentleman
What the Syntax Rules
Do
• Syntax rules also tell us how words form groups and are
hierarchically ordered in a sentence
“The captain ordered the old men and women off the ship”

• This sentence has two possible meanings:

– 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

• The meanings depend on how the words in the sentence are


grouped (specifically, to which words is the adjective ‘old’
applied?)

– 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”

– Each structure corresponds to a different meaning

• Structurally ambiguous sentences can often be humorous:

– 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

“Enormous crickets in pink socks danced at the prom.”

• Grammaticality is not based on meaningfulness

“Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.”

“A verb crumpled the milk.”

‘Twas brillig, and the slithy toves


Did gyre and gimble in the wabe

• Grammaticality is not based on truthfulness


Sentence Structure
• We could say that the sentence “The child
found the puppy” is based on the template
Det—N—V—Det—N

– But this would imply that sentences are just


strings of words without internal structure

– This sentence can actually be separated into


several groups:

• [the child] [found a puppy]


• [the child] [found [a puppy]]
• [[the] [child]] [[found] [[a] [puppy]]
Sentence Structure
• A tree diagram can be used to show
the hierarchy of the sentence:

The child found a


puppy
Constituents and
Constituency Tests
• Constituents are the natural groupings in a sentence

• Tests for constituency include:

– 1. “stand alone test”: if a group of words can stand alone, they form a
constituent

• A: “What did you find?”


• B: “A puppy.”

– 2. “replacement by a pronoun”: pronouns can replace constituents

• A: “Where did you find a puppy?”


• B: “I found him in the park.”

– 3. “move as a unit” test: If a group of words can be moved together, they


are a constituent

• A: “The child found a puppy.”  “A puppy was found by the child.”


Constituents and
Constituency Tests
• Experimental evidence shows that people
perceive sentences in groupings
corresponding to constituents

• Every sentence has at least one constituent


structure

– If a sentence has more than one constituent


structure, then it is ambiguous and each
constituent structure corresponds to a different
meaning
Syntactic Categories
• A syntactic category is a family of expressions that can substitute
for one another without loss of grammaticality

The child found a puppy. The child found a puppy.


A police officer found a puppy. The child ate the cake.
Your neighbor found a puppy. The child slept.

• All the underlined groups constitute a syntactic category known as a


noun phrase (NP)

– NPs may be a subject or an object of a sentence, may contain a


determiner, proper name, pronoun, or may be a noun alone

• All the bolded groups constitute a syntactic category known as a


verb phrase (VP)

– 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:

– Noun: puppy, girl, soup, happiness, pillow


– Verb: find, run, sleep, realize, see, want
– Preposition: up, down, across, into, from, with
– Adjective: red, big, candid, lucky, large
– Adverb: again, carefully, luckily, very, fairly

• Functional categories:

– Auxiliary: verbs such as have, and be, and modals such as


may, can, will, shall, must
– Determiners: the, a, this, that, those, each, every
Phrase Structure Trees and
Rules
• A phrase structure (PS) tree (or
constituent structure tree) is a tree
diagram with syntactic category
information:
Phrase Structure Trees and
Rules
• In a PS tree, every higher node dominates all the categories
beneath it

– S dominates everything

• A node immediately dominates


the categories directly below it

– The VP immediately dominates the


V and the NP

• Sisters are categories that are immediately dominated by


the same node

– The V and the NP are sisters


Phrase Structure Trees and
Rules
• Phrase structure rules specify the well-
formed structures of a sentence
– A tree must match the phrase structure
rules to be grammatical
• This tree is formed using the following
rules:

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.

• We therefore have to account for these possible


sentences in our phrase structure rules and need
the following rules so far:
Phrase Structure Trees and
Rules
• Phrase structure rules are used as a guide for
building trees

• To build a tree you expand every phrasal category


until only the lexical categories remain

• By following the guidelines in the phrase


structure rules, we can generate all the possible
grammatical sentences in a language

– Any tree that violates the phrase structure rules will


represent an ungrammatical sentence
The Infinity of Language:
Recursive Rules
• Recursive rules are rules in which a phrasal category can contain
itself

– Such as an NP containing another NP…

• NP  NP PP allows for the sentence: I saw the man with the telescope in a box.

– …or a VP containing a VP…

• VP  VP PP allows for a sentence like: The girl walked down the street in the
rain.

– …or a CP containing a S…

• CP  C S allows for embedding sentences inside sentences such as: The


children hope that the teacher knows that they are good students.

• Recursive rules allow a grammar to generate an infinite number of


sentences (in this case by adding PPs indefinitely)
The Infinity of Language:
Recursive Rules
• The recursive phrase structure rule VP  VP PP
allows the following tree:
Recursive Adjectives and
Possessives
• The case of multiple adjectives leads us to
revise our PS rules:

– The kindhearted, intelligent,


handsome boy had many
girlfriends leads us to create
the PS rule NP  Adj NP

– However, this rule would allow


an adjective to come before
a determiner, which is not
possible in English
Recursive Adjectives and
Possessives
• The problem is that determiners and adjectives function differently

– They both modify a noun


– But, while an NP can have multiple adjectives, it can only have one determiner
– Also, an adjective directly modifies a noun whereas a determiner modifies the chunk
of Adj + N

• Therefore the determiner must be


the sister of the group [Adj + N]

• So, we need to add one more level


of structure between the NP and the
N which is called N’

• Now we have the necessary sisterhood


requirements and we must revise our
phrase structure rules to account for N’

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)

• So, we need to add another


PS rule to our inventory:
Det  NP poss

• This new rule forms a


recursive set with the
rule NP  Det N’

• The recursive nature of PS rules


is common to all languages
Heads and Complements
• Phrase structure trees also show the relationships among the
elements in a sentence

– The NP immediately dominated by the S is the subject

– The NP immediately dominated by the VP is the direct object

• Another relationship is between the head of a phrase and its sisters

– 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

– The verb find requires an NP: Alex found the ball.


– The verb put requires both an NP and a PP: Alex put the ball
in the toy box.
– The verb sleep cannot take a complement: Alex slept.
– The noun belief optionally selects a PP: the belief in freedom
of speech.
– The adjective proud optionally selects a PP: proud of herself

• C-selection or subcategorization refers to the


information about what types of complements a head
can or must take
Heads and
Complements: Selection
• Verbs also select subjects and complements based on
semantic properties (S-selection)

– The verb murder requires a human subject and object

!The beer murdered the lamp.

– The verb drink requires its subject to be animate and its


optional complement object to be liquid

!The beer drank the lamp.

• For a sentence to be well-formed, it must conform to the


structural constraints of PS rules and must also obey the
syntactic (C-selection) and semantic (S-selection)
requirements of the head of each phrase
What Heads the
Sentence
• The category of Auxiliary verbs (such as will, has, is, and
may as well as modals might, could, would, and can)
heads a sentence because a sentence is about a
situation of state of affairs that happens at some point in
time

• Particular kinds of auxiliaries go with certain kinds of VPs

– be selects the progressive form of the verb


• The baby is eating.
– have selects the past participle form of the verb
• The baby has eaten.
– The modals select the infinitival form of the verb
• The baby must eat.
What Heads the
Sentence
• Many linguists use the symbols
T (tense) and TP (tense phrase)
instead of Aux and S, with the
TP having an intermediate T’
category

• X-bar theory is the theory


that all XPs have three
levels of structure

– 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

• However, not all sentences seem to have auxiliaries


– Sam kicked the soccer ball.

• But, this sentence does have


the past tense morpheme –ed,
and in sentences without an
auxiliary, the tense is the head
of the S
– Instead of having a word under Aux,
there is a tense specification
– The tense specification must match the inflection on the verb
Structural Ambiguities
• The following sentence has two meanings:

The boy saw the man with the telescope

• The meanings are:

– 1. The boy used the telescope to see the man


– 2. The boy saw the man who had a telescope

• Each of these meanings can be represented by a different


phrase structure tree

– The two interpretations are possible because the PS rules allow


more than one structure for the same string of words
Structural Ambiguities

• The boy used a telescope


to see the man • The boy saw the man
who had a telescope
Other Structures
• Thus far we have
fourteen phrase
structure rules in our
inventory

• However, this set is not


complete and cannot
account for sentences
such as:

– 1. The dog completely


destroyed the house.
– 2. The cat and the dog are
friends.
– 3. The cat is coy.
Other Structures
• Adverbs are modifiers that can specify how
(quickly, slowly) and when (yesterday, often) an
event happens

• Adverbs are sisters to phrasal categories and can


go to the right or left of the phrasal categories VP
and S
VP  Adv VP VP  VP Adv S
Adv S
Other Structures
• A coordinate structure is formed when
two constituents of the same category are
joined with a conjunction such as and or or
– In a coordinate structure, the second element
of the coordination (NP2) forms a constituent
with and (see “move as a unit” test)

• Sentences can also have the verb be


followed by an adjective
– In these cases the main verb be acts like the
auxiliaries be and have
Sentence Relatedness
• Recognizing that some sentences are related to each other is
another part of our syntactic competence

The boy is sleeping. Is the boy sleeping?

• The first sentence is a declarative sentence, meaning that it


asserts that a particular situation exists

• The second sentence is a yes-no question, meaning that


asks for confirmation of a situation

• The difference in meaning is indicated by different word


orders, which means that certain structural differences
correspond to certain meaning differences
– For these sentences, the difference lies in where the auxiliary
occurs in the sentence
Transformational Rules
• Yes-no questions are generated in two steps:

– 1. The PS rules generate a declarative sentence which


represents the basic structure, or deep structure (d-
structure) of the sentence
– 2. A transformational rule then moves the auxiliary before
the subject to create the surface structure (s-structure)

• 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 “__”

• The gap represents the position from which a constituent has


been moved
Transformational Rules
Transformational Rules
• Other sentence pairs that involve
transformational rules are:

– 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

– The complementizer that may be omitted when it


precedes an embedded sentence as long as the
embedded sentence does not occur in subject position
• I know that you know. I know you know
• That you know bothers me. *You know bothers me.

– Subject-verb agreement stretches across all structures


between the subject and the verb
Wh Questions
Example: What will Max chase?

• Wh questions are formed in three steps:


– 1. The PS rules generate a CP d-structure with the
wh phrase occupying an NP position within the S
(in this case a direct object position)

– 2. The transformational rule Move Aux moves the


auxiliary (in this case will) to adjoin with the S

– 3. The transformational rule Move wh moves the


wh word (in this case what) to the beginning of the
sentence
Wh Questions
• Deep structure for • Surface structure
What will Max for What will Max
chase? chase?
Wh Questions
Example: Which dog did Michael feed?

• Here the auxiliary do is not a part of the d-


structure of the sentence
– The d-structure is: Michael fed which dog?

• The Move Aux rule will move the auxiliary, in


this case only the past tense

• Another rule called “do support” will then


insert a do in the Aux spot to carry the tense
Wh Questions
• Deep structure for • Surface structure
Which dog did for Which dog did
Michael feed? Michael feed?
UG Principles and
Parameters
• Universal Grammar (UG) provides the basic
design for all languages, and each language has
its own parameters, or variations on the basic
plan

– All languages have PS rules that generate d-structures


– All phrases consist of heads and complements
– All sentences are headed by Aux (or T)
– All languages seem to have movement rules

– However, languages have different word orders within


phrases and sentences, so heads and complements
may be present in different orders across languages
UG Principles and
Parameters
• Not all languages have wh movement, but for those
that do:

– The question element always moves to C


• But this is done in various ways (Italian vs. English vs. German
vs. Czech)
– A wh phrase cannot move out of certain relative clauses or
clauses beginning with whether or if
– A wh phrase cannot be extracted from inside a possessive
NP

• These features of wh movement are present in all


languages that allow wh movement and are part of
the innate blueprint for language that is UG
Sign Language Syntax
• The syntax of sign languages also follow the
principles of UG and has:
– Auxiliaries
– Transformations such as topicalization, which
moves the direct object to the beginning of a
sentence for emphasis, and wh movement
– Constraints on transformations

• That UG is present in signed languages and


spoken languages shows that the human brain
is designed to learn language, not just speech.

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