0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views23 pages

Unit Ii - Word Level and Syntactic Analysis: LU 15 - Constituency

This document discusses constituency and phrase structure analysis. It explains that words group together to form constituents, with different types of phrases having different internal structures. The key phrases discussed are noun phrases, verb phrases, prepositional phrases, and adjective phrases. Rules are provided for building these phrases and sentences. Agreement between subjects and verbs is also covered, noting the need for more complex rules to handle features like number, person, and gender.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views23 pages

Unit Ii - Word Level and Syntactic Analysis: LU 15 - Constituency

This document discusses constituency and phrase structure analysis. It explains that words group together to form constituents, with different types of phrases having different internal structures. The key phrases discussed are noun phrases, verb phrases, prepositional phrases, and adjective phrases. Rules are provided for building these phrases and sentences. Agreement between subjects and verbs is also covered, noting the need for more complex rules to handle features like number, person, and gender.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 23

Unit II - WORD LEVEL AND

SYNTACTIC ANALYSIS

LU 15 – Constituency
Introduction
• The fundamental idea of syntax is that word group together to form
constituents each of which acts as a single unit.

• They combine with other constituents to form larger constituents and


sentence.

• The bird, the beautiful garden and the rain are all noun phrases that can
occur in the same syntactic context.

• The noun phrase The bird can combine with the verb phrase flies to
form the sentence.

• Different types of phrases have different internal structures.


Phrase Level Constructions
• Constituents are identified by their similar contexts.
• Decide whether a group of words is a phrase and it can be substituted
with some other group of words without changing the meaning.
• If such a substitution is possible then the set of words forms a phrase.
This is called substitution test.
• Consider the following sentences:
– Hena reads a book
– Hena reads a storybook
– Those girls read a book
– She reads a comic book
• Replacement: for ex: Hena, Those girls, she or book, storybook, comic
book.
• Constituents represents the paradigmatic (typical) relationship that is
syntactic positions are said to be members of one paradigm.
Phrase Level Constructions – cntd.,
• Phrase types are named after their head, which is the lexical category
that determines the properties of the phrase.
• If the head is noun the phrase is called noun phrase, verb the phrase is
verb phrase and other lexical categories are adjective and preposition.
Phrase Level Constructions – cntd.,
1. Noun Phrase:
• NP is a phrase whose head is a noun or pronoun.
• It can function as subject, object or complement.
• The modifiers of a NP can be determiners or adjective phrases.
• The main head is the noun and others are optional such as
pronoun, determiner etc.
• It is constructed using phrase structure rules that is A->BC which
states that constituents A can be rewritten as two constituents B
and C.
• These rules specify order of the phrases.
Phrase Level Constructions – cntd.,
Phrase structure rules of Noun Phrase:
NP -> Pronoun
NP -> Det Noun
NP -> Noun
NP -> Adj Noun
NP -> Det Adj Noun

NP -> (Det) (Adj) Noun


• The parentheses are optional. This rule states that a noun phrase
consists of a noun possibly preceded by a determiner and an adjective.
• This rule does not cover all possible NPs.

NP -> (Det) (AP) Noun (PP)


• More than one adjective are adjective phrase (AP) and Prepositions are
PP.
Phrase Level Constructions – cntd.,
Examples of Noun Phrases:
a. They
b. The foggy morning
c. Chilled water
d. A beautiful lake in Kashmir
e. Cold banana shake
Sentence (a) only pronoun
Sentence (b) consists of determiner, adjective (AP) and a noun
Sentence (c) consists of AP and noun
Sentence (d) consists of determiner, AP, noun and PP
Sentence (e) consists of an adjective followed by a sequence of nouns
Noun sequence is termed as nominal.
NP -> (Det) (AP) Nom (PP)
Nom -> Noun | Noun Nom
Phrase Level Constructions – cntd.,
• A noun phrase can act as a subject, object or predicate

Consider the following sentences:


a. The foggy damped weather disturbed the match
b. I would like a nice cold banana shake
c. Kula botanical garden is a beautiful location

Sentence (a) NP acts as a subject


Sentence (b) NP acts as an object
Sentence (c) NP acts as a predicate.
Phrase Level Constructions – cntd.,
2. Verb Phrase:
• VP is headed by verb, it organizes various elements of the sentence that
depend syntactically on the verb.
• Consider the following sentences:
a. Ram slept
b. The boy kicked the ball
c. Ram slept in the garden
d. The boy gave the girl a book
e. The boy gave the girl a book with blue cover.
• Sentence (a) [VP -> Verb]
• Sentence (b) [VP -> Verb NP]
• Sentence (c) [VP -> Verb PP]
• Sentence (d) [VP -> Verb NP NP]
• Sentence (e) [VP -> Verb NP NP PP]
Phrase Level Constructions – cntd.,
• The number of NPs and VPs is limited to two but to add more than two
PPs.
• VP -> Verb (NP) (NP) (PP)*
• Consider the sentence “I know that Taj is one of the seven wonders”
• In this example NP is replaced by S VP -> Verb S

3. Prepositional Phrase:
• It is headed by preposition. They consist of preposition followed by
noun phrase.
• Ex: We played volleyball on the beach
• The rule is PP -> Prep (NP)
Phrase Level Constructions – cntd.,
4. Adjective phrase:
• It is headed by adjective and consists of an adjective which may be
preceded by an adverb and followed by a PP.
• Ex: Ashish is clever
The train is very late
My sister is fond (affectionate) of animals
• The phrase structure rule is: AP -> (Adv) Adj (PP)

5. Adverb phrase:
• It consists of an adverb preceded by a degree adverb.
• Ex: Time passes very quickly
• AdvP -> (Intens) Adv
Sentence Level Constructions
• A sentence can have varying structures.

Four types of structures:


1. Declarative structure
2. Imperative structure
3. Yes-no question structure
4. Wh-question structure

1. Declarative Structure:
• It has a subject followed by a predicate. The subject is noun phrase
and the predicate is a verb phrase.
• Ex: I like horse riding.
• The rule is S-> NP VP
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
2. Imperative Structure:
• It begins with a verb phrase and lack subject. The subject of these
types of sentence is implicit and is understood to be ‘You’.

• These types of sentences are used for commands and suggestions.

• The grammar rule is:


S -> VP

• Example:
Look at the door
Give me the book
Stop talking
Show me the latest design
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
3. yes-no Question Structure:
• These sentences begin with an auxiliary verb followed by a subject NP,
followed by a VP.
• The Grammar rule is:
S -> Aux NP VP
Examples:
Do you have a red pen?
Is the game over?
Can you show me your album?

4. Wh-question Structure:
• It is more complex. These sentences begin with a wh-words who, which,
where, what, why and when.
• It may have a wh-phrase as a subject or may include another subject.
• Ex: Which team won the match?
• The Grammar rule is same for declarative sentence except wh:
S -> Wh-NP VP
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
• Another type of wh-question structure is one that involves more than one NP.
• In this type of questions the auxiliary verb comes before the subject NP just
as yes-no question structures.
• Ex: which cameras can you show me in your shop?
• The rule is: S -> Wh-NP Aux NP VP
Summary of grammar rules:
S -> NP VP
S -> VP
S -> Aux NP VP
S -> Wh-NP Aux NP VP
S -> Wh-NP VP
NP -> (Det) (AP) Nom (PP)
VP -> Verb (NP) (NP) (PP)*
VP -> Verb S
AP -> (Adv) Adj (PP)
PP -> Prep (NP)
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
Coordination:
• Coordination is a structure and it refers to conjoining phrases with
conjunctions like ‘and’, ‘or’ and ‘but’.
• For example a coordinate noun phrase can consist of two other noun
phrases separated by a conjunction ‘and’
I ate [NP [NP an apple] and [NP a banana]]
• Similarly verb phrases and prepositional phrases can be conjoined as
follows:
It is [VP [VP dazzling] and [VP raining]]
• Even a sentence can be conjoined
[S [S I am reading the book] and [S I am also watching the
movie]]
• We need to devise rules to handle these constructions:
NP -> NP and VP
VP -> VP and NP
S -> S and S
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
Agreement:
• Most verbs use two different forms in present tense – one for third
person singular objects and other for all kinds of subjects.
• Third person singular ends with –s.
• Whenever there is a verb that has some noun acting as a subject this
agreement has to be confirmed.
• Example for how the subject NP affects the form of the verb:
Does [NP Priya] sing? - subject NP is singular so –es is used
Do [NP they] eat? - subject NP is plural so do is used.
• Sentences in which subject and verb do not agree are ungrammatical.
For ex: [Does] they eat?
[Do] she sings?
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
• Rules that handle yes-no question for the previous sentence is
S -> Aux NP VP
• Based on subject-verb agreement we replace this rule as follows:
S -> 3sgAux 3sgNP VP
S -> Non3sgAux Non3sgNP VP
• We could add rules for the lexicon:
3sg Aux -> does | has | can
Non3sg Aux -> do | have | can
• Similarly, rules for 3sgNP and Non3sgNP need to be added.
3sgNP -> (Det) (AP) SgNom (PP)
Non3sgNP -> (Det) (AP) PlNom (PP)
SgNom -> SgNoun | SgNoun SgNom
PlNom -> PlNoun | PlNoun PlNom
SgNoun -> Priya | lake | banana | sister | …
PlNoun -> Children | ….
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
• We also have to add rules for the first and second person pronouns.
• The number of agreement doubles the size of the grammar.
• Introduce a new version of NP and noun rules for various cases.
• Nominative (I, she, they, he) and accusative (me, her, him, them) cases
of pronoun.
• Hindi and Urdu which have not only noun-verb agreement but also
gender agreements so CFG cannot handle this problem efficiently.
• We solve this over generation and loss of generality problem we can
use feature structures.
• Feature structures are able to capture grammatical properties without
increasing the size of the grammar.
• Models based on this idea are called constraint-based formalisms.
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
Feature Structures:
• Set of feature-value pairs.
• They can be used to efficiently capture the properties of grammatical
categories.
• Features are simply symbols representing properties.
• For example the number property of a noun phrase can be represented
by NUMBER feature.
• The value will be SG (singular) and PL (plural).
• It is represented by a matrix like diagram called attribute value matrix
(AVM).
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
• An AVM consisting of a single NUMBER feature with the value SG is
rep as [NUMBER SG]
• The value of a feature can be left unspecified and rep by an empty pair
of square brackets [ NUMBER []]
• The third person singular noun phrase is

• The third person plural noun phrase is:


Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
• Consider the case of combining the NUMBER and PERSON features
into single AGREEMENT feature.

• Two most important operations we need to perform that is merging the


information content of two structures are similar and rejecting the
structures that are incompatible.

• The operation is called unification it is implemented as binary operator


(U) that takes two feature structures as arguments and returns a
merged feature structures if they are compatible otherwise reports a
failure.
[NUMBER PL) U [NUMBER PL] = [NUMBER PL]
Sentence Level Constructions – cntd.,
• The unification succeeds as the two structures have the same value for
the NUMBER feature.
• A feature with an unspecified value in one structure can be matched
with any value in a corresponding feature in another structure.
[NUMBER PL] U [NUMBER []] = [NUMBER PL]
• The value PL of the first structure matches the value [] of the second
structure and becomes the value of the NUMBER feature of the output
structure.
• [NUMBER PL] U [NUMBER SG] Fails
• The CFG rules can have feature structures attached to them to realize
the constraints on the constituents of the sentence.

You might also like