Syntax Overview
Syntax Overview
ORIENTATION
LINGUISTICS 2 OVERVIEW
Attendance: 5%
Mini test: 20%
Midterm test: 20%
Final test: 55%
TEXTBOOK
Syntax: Semantics:
Phonetics and Phonology
• The study of sounds
Morphology
• The study of word structures
CORE
LINGUISTI Syntax
CS • The study of ways in which words are combined into larger
structures
Semantics
• The study of meaning
Pragmatics
• The study of meaning in particular context
Sociolinguistics
• The study of language and society
Stylistics
• The study of language and literature
APPLIED
LINGUISTI Psycholinguistics
CS • The study of language and mind
Computational linguistics
• The simulation of language by the use of computers
Comparative linguistics
• The study of different languages and their respective linguistic
systems
WHAT IS SYNTAX?
Constituents
Functions
Categories
SENTENCE STRUCTURES
FUNCTIONS CATEGORIES
SENTENCE STRUCTURES:
FUNCTIONS
Subject and Predicate
Modifier
Complement
SUBJECT AND PREDICATE
Subject Predicate
Tom is going to school.
The man who lives next door is Susan’s boyfriend.
Why he told lie made everyone wonder.
The pencils in the box under the bed were found by the little girl.
A well-formed sentence:
Subject + Predicate
WHICH CAN BE COMBINED TO MAKE
WELL-FORMED SENTENCES?
a. remind me of you
b. as quickly as he could Subjects = NPs
Predicates = VPs
c. soggy chips
d. pamphlets advertising new syntactic theories
e. by the end of this week
f. suddenly rained from the sky
g. are in demand
c+ a / c + f / c+g / d+a / d+ f/ d+g
PRACTICE
B&C: sisters
B&C: daughters of A
A: mother of B&C
HEAD
The head of a phrase is the element that the phrase is centered on. It is
the one essential – OBLIGATORY – element in that phrase.
It’s the category of the head of a phrase that determines the category of
the phrase.
Head Category
N NP
V VP
A AP
Adv AdvP
P PP
Example?
PRACTICE
Finding the head of the following phrases
1. The hot boiling water
2. Have never been to me
3. Under the sea
4. Very quickly
5. Much quicker
6. Know the woman you have been talking about lately
THE MODIFIER-HEAD RELATION
Look at the following example:
Two rather dubious jokes
COMPARE?
√
x
x
THE COMPLEMENT-HEAD
RELATION
Look at the following phrases:
1. do homework
2. under the table
3. give Mary some flowers