Syntax Lecture 1 Introduction To Syntax
Syntax Lecture 1 Introduction To Syntax
Faculty of Languages
Syntax
Oct. 2018
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Introduction to Syntax
Before defining what is meant by
syntax, it is a great of importance
to introduce some aspects which
are interrelated with syntax
(interdisciplinary phenomena ).
Hence, the questions arises here
is:
Which language aspect is more
closed to syntax?
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Grammar
Before talking about the origin and
definition of grammar as a term, the
answers of the following introductory
questions should be clear to the learners
of syntax:
Do we acquire grammar or learn it? / Is it -
acquired or learnt?
- When do humans start learning/ -
acquiring grammar?
- What does grammar teach? / What do -
you learn by grammar?
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How do children acquire grammar?
- 6 months: Produce sounds as ‘ma’, ‘da’ -
etc. during the other 6 months gradually
developed to ‘mam’, ‘dad’.
- 12-18 months: produce single content -
words as mummy, milk, water, etc., but
not functional words (and, the, because
etc.). This stage is known as a one word
stage.
- 18-24: Produce two words together
making sentences like: want water/milk,
mum come. It is known as a two word
stage.
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- 24-30: Produce three and four words,
some are grammatically complete as:
Mother like tea. But functional words
are missed. This stage is known as a
three word stage.
- 36 months: Inflections and some
functional words are acquired like: -ing,
plural –s, articles, 3rd person singular,
past tense, auxiliaries etc.
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Therefore, grammar is acquired
by the age of three years with
some individual variation which
may arise among participants.
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Grammar
The word grammar came from old
French 'gramaire', French took it from
Latin " grammatice " and Latin
withdrew it from Greek "grammatikos "
meaning ‘letters or art of letters’.
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Grammar
Grammar can be defined as a mental
representation of a speaker’s linguistic
competence.
It is what a speaker knows about the
language, including its phonology,
morphology, syntax, semantics,
pragmatics and lexicon.
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Grammar teaches , rules , in addition to that
it teaches how to use those rules in real life
communication (pragmatics) , further , it
teaches how to convey a clear meaning by
using a piece of language ( phrase , clause or
sentences , ) (semantics) . Furthermore ,
grammar, helps to diagonse/ analyse what is
hidden inside of a word ( morphology) ,
phrase , clause and sentence ( syntax ).
(Abdullah, 2018)
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The next discussion will shed the
light on other aspect that is more
closed and correlated to syntax:
What is it?
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Morphology
Terminologically, the term ‘morphology’
comes from Latin, it consists of two
parts:
Morph-: form/shape
-(o)logy: science or branch of study
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Morphology
In biology, a branch of biology that
deals with the form and structure of
animals and plants.
It is the form and structure of an
organism or any of its parts
amphibian morphology external and
internal eye morphology 12
In linguistics, it is a study and
description of word formation (such
as inflection, derivation, and
compounding) in language.
Morphology is the study of how
words are formed out of smaller
units (called morphemes), and so
addresses questions such as:
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What are the component
morphemes of a word like
‘terminology’, and what is the
nature of the morphological
operations by which they are
combined together to form the
overall word? (Radford, 2009)
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Morphology is a study and description of
word formation (such as inflection,
derivation, and compounding) in
language. It concerns with the study of
the word structure not in its surface
forms as –s/-es, -d/-ed, -ing etc.
(inflection) and –ful/-less, -ness, -ry, -logy
etc. (derivation),
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but it goes more deeper to the inner
structure leading to comprehend (in-
depth understanding) the whole
meaning which is the overall task of a
language and its aspects (phonology,
morphology, syntax, semantics,
pragmatics and lexicon). Consider
the following:
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Otorhinolaryngology
Laparohysterosalpingooophorectomy
Antidisestablishmentarianism
Denationalization
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The previous terms appear difficult
and complicated, but they can be
comprehended easily by analysing
their structure and how they are
formed.
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Morphology is the exclusive agent to
do such process followed the
procedure of breaking down the
term into logical units and
understand the meaning of each part
reaching to the overall meaning of
the term as in the following:
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Otorhinolaryngology
Otorhinolaryngology
Ot(o)-:
-rhin(o)-:
-laryng(o)-:
-logy:
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Otorhinolaryngology
Otorhinolaryngology
Ot(o)-: ear
-rhin(o)-: nose
-laryng(o)-: larynx
-logy: study or science
The study of ear, nose, and
larynx problems.
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Otorhinolaryngology
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What is meant by a
syntax ?
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Terminologically, syntax can be anlayzed
in the following way:
syn-: derived from Latin, latin took it
from the Greek preposition ‘sun’ means
‘together’
-tax: derived from Greek root means ‘to
put in order’ , as a whole means putting
things together in an orderly manner.
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Conclusion
Learning and practising English syntax
comprehensively encourage the
syntacticians to generate new rules
and formulate new theories derived
from results of proved hypotheses and
analytical processes of the different
structures of phrase, clause and
sentence (immediate, intermediate,
ultimate and null constituents). Thus
can be generalized and applied in the
study and use of a language or
languages.
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Ended
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