Syntax: The Sentence Patterns of Language: 01:615:201 Introduction To Linguistic Theory
Syntax: The Sentence Patterns of Language: 01:615:201 Introduction To Linguistic Theory
Introduction to Linguistic
Theory
Adam Szczegielniak
– 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”
– 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
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.”
– 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:
– 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
• The
core
of
every
phrase
is
its
head
– In
the
VP
walk
the
pugs,
the
verb
walk
is
the
head
This should be A
Phrase Structure Trees
Phrase structure (PS) trees show the
internal structure of a sentence along with
syntactic category information:
Phrase Structure Trees
• In
a
PS
tree,
every
higher
node
dominates
all
the
categories
beneath
it
– S dominates everything
• Sisters
are
categories
that
are
immediately
dominated
by
the
same
node
(9)
Corrections to the
textbook typos are in
red.
Building Phrase Structure Trees
The majority of the senate became afraid of the vice
president.
The Infinity of Language:
Recursive Rules
• Recursive rules are rules in which a phrasal category can contain
itself
• Recursive rules allow a grammar to generate an infinite number of
sentences
– 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
– The Move rule can be applied to any PP as long as it is an
adjunct to V.
– Subject-verb agreement stretches across all structures
between the subject and the verb:
Yes/No
• The
forma=on
of
yes-‐no
ques=ons
comes
from
the
transforma=on
Move
reloca=ng
the
T
from
the
corresponding
declara=ve
sentence:
• The
boy
will
sleep
will
the
boy
___
sleep
C
takes
TP
• C
takes
TP
as
its
complement,
C
can
have
Q
feature,
but
not
always
Embedded
CP’s
• CP’s
are
needed
not
just
for
ques=ons:
– belief
that
iron
floats
(NP
complement)
– wonders
if
iron
floats
(VP
complement)
– happy
that
iron
floats
(AP
complement)
– about
whether
iron
will
sink
(PP
complement)
Examples
of
embedded
CP
Yes/No
ques=ons
T-‐>C
Wh Questions
Example:
What
will
Max
chase?
• This
Wh
ques=on
is
formed
in
three
steps:
– 1.
The
PS
rules
generate
a
basic
declara=ve
word
order:
Max
will
chase
what?
– 2.
Move
shiNs
the
word
what
to
the
beginning
of
the
sentence:
What
Max
will
chase?
– 3.
Move
shiNs
the
modal
will
to
occur
before
the
subject
NP:
What
will
Max
chase?
Wh-‐deriva=on
Wh-‐movement
Do-‐inser=on
• Which
toys
does
Pete
like
Modals/
Auxiliaries
1.
Spot
has
chased
a
squirrel.
2.
Nellie
is
snoring.
• Like
the
modals,
the
auxiliaries
have
and
be
move
to
the
posi=on
preceding
the
subject
in
both
yes-‐no
ques=ons
and
wh
ques=ons.
3.
Has
Spot
____
chased
a
squirrel?
4.
Is
Nellie
____
snoring?
5.
What
has
Spot
____
chased
____?
• The
ques=on
is:
where
do
have
and
be
originate
in
the
d-‐structure?
• Note
that
have
and
be
can
occur
in
the
same
sentence
with
a
modal:
– Nellie
may
be
snoring.
– Spot
must
have
found
a
squirrel.
recursive
v
• Our
analysis
leads
us
to
conclude
that
have/
be
originate
under
V
in
a
recursive
Vd
structure,as
follows.
Tense/Modal
• When
there
is
no
modal,
T
is
occupied
by
a
tense
feature,
which
is
realized
on
have/be,
as
would
be
the
case
for
other
verbs
like
snore:
Movement
from
V-‐>T-‐>C
• What
has
Spot
chased?
• Here
is
the
d-‐structure
(from
the
X-‐bar
derived
phrase
structure
rules):
V-‐>T
T-‐>C
Wh-‐move
• We
see
that
V-‐>T
feeds
T-‐>C,
which
allows
wh
move.
PS
rules
–
Warning,
these
are
textbook
PS
rules.
For
ones
recommended
by
me
see
my
addi=onal
text
• 1.
S
→
NP
VP
• 11.
AP
→
Ad
• 2.
NP
→
Det
Nd
• 12.
Ad
→
A
• 3.
Nd
→
N
• 13.
Ad
→
A
PP
• 4.
VP
→
Vd
• 14.
Nd
→
A
Nd
• 5.
Vd
→
V
NP
• 15.
Ad
→
Int
Ad
• 6.
Vd→
V
PP
• 16.
Vd
→
Vd
PP
• 7.
Vd
→
V
AP
• 17.
Nd
→
Nd
PP
• 8.
Nd
→
N
PP
• 18.
Vd
→
AdvP
Vd
• 9.
PP
→
Pd
• 19.
Vd
→
Vd
Adv
• 10.
Pd
→
P
NP
• P20.
Vd
→
V
VP
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 structures that conform to X-
bar schema
– All phrases consist of specifiers, heads, and
complements
– All sentences are headed by 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
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