This document discusses syntax, ambiguity, and their relationship to communication.
[1] It defines syntax as the rules that govern how words are arranged to form sentences, and notes some common syntactic patterns in English like word order and conjunction usage. [2] It then defines ambiguity as a situation that can be understood in multiple ways, and discusses syntactic ambiguity specifically. [3] It examines how ambiguity can negatively impact communication by causing misunderstandings, but that ambiguity can be resolved through clarifying syntax, punctuation, or intonation.
This document discusses syntax, ambiguity, and their relationship to communication.
[1] It defines syntax as the rules that govern how words are arranged to form sentences, and notes some common syntactic patterns in English like word order and conjunction usage. [2] It then defines ambiguity as a situation that can be understood in multiple ways, and discusses syntactic ambiguity specifically. [3] It examines how ambiguity can negatively impact communication by causing misunderstandings, but that ambiguity can be resolved through clarifying syntax, punctuation, or intonation.
TASK 2: PRESENTATION Group: Aryanna Sara Woi Min Xuan Syntax - Definition of Syntax - Rules of syntax Definition
﹡ In linguistics, "syntax" refers to the principles that
preside the ways during which words combine to form sentences, clauses, and clauses. The term is additionally used to mean the study of the syntactic properties of a language. ﹡ Syntax is the theory that allows people to understand how to start a question with a question word ("What is that?"), or that adjectives generally precede the nouns they describe ("blue car"), subjects often precede verbs in non-question sentences ("He juggled"), prepositional phrases start with prepositions ("to the mall"), helping verbs precede main verbs ("can go" or "will do"), and so on. ﹡ According to Blakeley (2018), Syntax is the area of linguistics that studies the structure and formation of sentences. It explains how words and phrases are arranged to create correct sentences. A sentence could make no sense and still be correct from the syntax point of regard as long as words are in their appropriate spots and agree with one other. Rules of Syntax in Linguistics
﹡ English language often follow ordering patterns in
clauses and sentences. For instance, compound sentences are joined by conjunctions (and, but, or) or that multiple adjectives modifying the identical noun follow a selected order as per to their class (such as number-size-color, as in "six small green chairs"). The rules of how to order words help the language parts make sense. This is because sentences have a certain structure. ﹡ There is a fixed specific order of word categories, rather than a fixed order for particular words themselves. It is important to make a distinction between grammar and syntax, and to realize that syntax is a component of grammar. ﹡ Following proper syntax does not mean that a sentence will make sense, though. Linguist Chomsky created the sentence "Colorless green ideas sleep furiously," which is both syntactically and grammatically correct because it has the words in the correct order and verbs that agree with subjects, but it is still nonsense. With it, Chomsky showed that rules governing syntax are distinct from meanings that words convey. Ambiguity - Definition of Ambiguity - Syntactical Ambiguity Definition ﹡ Ambiguity is a concept or situation which can be understood in more than one way. Ambiguity is analogous to “vagueness,” except vagueness refers to a general lack of clarity; something vague may not have any clear meanings while something ambiguous might need several possible clear meanings, while that ambiguity refers to something having multiple possible meanings. Syntactical Ambiguity ﹡ In English grammar, syntactic ambiguity is the appearance of two or more possible meanings within one sentence or sequence of words, as averse to lexical ambiguity, which is the presence of two or more possible meanings within a single word. The context of its use can be determined by the intended meaning of a syntactically ambiguous phrase. Syntactical ambiguity is a grammatical construct, and occurs from the difficulty of applying universal grammatical laws to sentence structure. ﹡ An example of syntactical ambiguity is "Bob hit the ﹡ Comparing the phrase person with the pole". "Bob hit the person with This phrasing is unclear the pole" to the analogous as to whether the person "Bob hit the person with was hit with a pole, or the tattoo" provides some whether the person with a insights. As a tattoo is pole was struck by Bob. often associated with The context can violent tendencies, the substantially reduce second sentence clearly syntactical ambiguity. For conveys that the person instance, knowing that with the tattoo was struck either Bob, or the person, by Bob but not both, had a pole resolves the syntactical ambiguity. ﹡ Syntactic ambiguity generally results from the poor usage of words. If thought isn’t considered when selecting phrases that could be taken in a connotative rather than a denotative context may have over one meaning, or if the sentences during which they're used are not properly constructed, the results can often be mistaken by readers or listeners. Ambiguity in Communication - Consequences of Ambiguity in Communication - Resolution of Ambiguity Consequences of Ambiguity in Communication
﹡ Ambiguity can negatively affect the response or the
feedback to the message communicated and received. This may usually be the case where the reader or listener decides to take for granted one of the meanings of the ambiguous expressions communicated to them.
﹡ If they unfortunately take a wrong meaning or
interpretation for granted then this will likely affect their response to the communicated message. The feedback will be negative or contrary to the expected. As an example, attached below is a picture depicting a message addressed to the players on a golf course. ﹡ This message’s true intent is to warn others of social distancing, and to reduce risk of contamination; therefore, the administrators had issued a reminder to not touch other players golf- balls. ﹡ However, if the players in question misinterpreted the notice, there will be a negative response as most will see the notice as vulgar with inappropriate connotations, and this is serious in communication because the response or feedback is a most vital parameter utilized in measuring the effectiveness in communication. Resolution of Ambiguity in Communication
﹡ Ambiguities in language are usually resolved with the
proper use of relevant prosodic features like stress, tone, intonation and pause; hence, such disambiguation becomes less problematic because those prosodic features or elements when properly used can easily make the intended meaning known. But unfortunately, in written communication it is significantly harder to represent. ﹡ Ambiguity in written communication can also be resolved by specifying the intended constituents’ structure of such a sentence or expression and thereby preventing misinterpretation. This could be done by employing a technique called hyphenation. As the name suggests, this method involves the utilization of a hyphen (-), which is one of the more common punctuation marks that is specially used in the formation of compound lexical items especially in compound nouns. This method can be used to resolve the ambiguity of the expression “other players balls” then can be properly hyphenated as “other players golf- balls”. ﹡ Proper punctuation of grammatical strings using commas can also help to prevent and resolve cases of double or multiple semantic interpretations. Sherman and Johnson (1983) discerned that the key function of punctuation is to make written communication clearer and easy to read. Conclusion ﹡ As future teachers, we should all strive to be good communicators, therefore we must know how to avoid ambiguity at all times. This is because ambiguity, due to its tendency to contain multiple interpretations may prove a hindrance to proper comprehension, an obstacle in getting the desired response and an impediment to the attainment of the communicator’s target goal. As a result, we should strive to understand the possible causes of ambiguity, the consequences of ambiguity, also the application of corresponding disambiguation techniques to resolve such ambiguity, and ultimately attain semantic clarity which tremendously important in effective communication. Thank You!