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Linguistics - Syntax

Refactored from Linguistics Notes Meta


  • The syntax sets rules for how words relate to each other in a sentence
  • Sentences are made of smaller pieces called constituents, which are made of words
  • The combination of morphology and syntax is called morphosyntax
  • Ways to do syntax
    • Word order as long as they can be consistent throughout the language, such as
      • subject verb object as in English
      • subject object verb in Hindi
      • verb subject object as in Irish
    • Adding a morpheme. As in Latin and Ancient Greek
    • Or a combination of them, like
      • The employer hired the employee rather than * the employee hired the employer
      • I see them rather than * Me see they
  • Grammaticality refers to whether a sentence follows a language’s grammar but not the following:
    • Whether or not the sentence make sense
      • For example, Colourless green ideas sleep furiously is grammatically correct but doesn’t make any sense
      • The ungrammatical sentence for that example would be * Furiously sleep ideas green colourless
    • Getting approval from others
  • The substitution test is when we replace a group of words with something else and see if it still means the same thing. If it does, the group of words that we replace can act as a single unit
  • There are other sentence structures that change the order or words while retaining its meaning
    • For example, in English there’s the cleft construction ‘It’s object that subject verb
    • The cleft test switches sentence from its normal structure to the cleft construction is used to determine what parts should move together
    • Note that there are different tests for different languages
    • Example:
      • Taylor sees the rabbit works
      • But * It’s rabbit that Taylor sees the doesn’t
      • Neither does * It’s sees that Taylor the rabbit or things like that
      • It’s see the rabbit that Taylor does works
  • The predicate is the verb and object grouped together because it turns out that they group together more closely according to the cleft test
  • Notation
    • These are the ways to denote the word groupings like syntax and bracket highlighting in code
    • Linguists usually use a tree diagram to do this
    • A sentence breaks down into its constituents, which can be further broken down into constituents or words
    • Draw triangles for branches that are not important
    • There are also other methods as well
  • Determiners are words that give detail about the noun
    • Like: a, the, this, every, etc
    • Some theory argues that determiner + noun = determiner phrase
  • Recursion is a property found in grammar in most languages.
    • Basically, a phrase can be nested in another phrase of the same kind.
    • Example: f(x + f(2f(y)))

References