Generitivism
Generitivism
Generative Grammar
For example, a prescriptive grammarian may study how parts of speech are
ordered in English sentences, with the goal of laying out rules (nouns precede
verbs in simple sentences, for example). A linguist studying generative grammar,
however, is more likely to be interested in issues such as how nouns are
distinguished from verbs across multiple languages.
The main principle of generative grammar is that all humans are born with an
innate capacity for language and that this capacity shapes the rules for what is
considered "correct" grammar in a language. The idea of an innate language
capacity—or a "universal grammar"—is not accepted by all linguists. Some
believe, to the contrary, that all languages are learned and, therefore, based on
certain constraints.
Proponents of the universal grammar argument believe that children, when they
are very young, are not exposed to enough linguistic information to learn the
rules of grammar. That children do in fact learn the rules of grammar is proof,
according to some linguists, that there is an innate language capacity that allows
them to overcome the "poverty of the stimulus."