Date post: | 21-Dec-2015 |
Category: |
Documents |
View: | 336 times |
Download: | 3 times |
Phrase Structure Rules NP => (Det) (Adj) N (PP) PP => P NP
NP NP NP NP
N Det N Det Adj N Det N PP
John the boy the smart boy the boy P NP
in Det N
the bubble
Phrase structure trees
Recursion Some phrasal categories may appear to the left
or right of the arrow
NP (Det) N (PP)
PP P (NP) Recursion: the property of language that
allows for the embedding of categories (which can yield infinitely long phrases)
PP
P NP
from Det N PP
a boy P NP
in Det N
a bubble
VP VP VP
V V NP V NP PP Adv
sang ate Det N sang Det N P NP badly
the cake a song in Det N
the shower
VP => V (NP) (PP) (Adv)
S
NP VP
Det N V NP
The dog ate Det N
the bone S NP VP
S
NP Aux VP
Det N will V NP
The dog eat Det N
the bone S NP Aux VP
Ambiguity The property of having two or more
meanings. Lexical ambiguity Structural ambiguity
Lexical ambiguityHeadlines:
PROSTITUTES APPEAL TO POPE IRAQI HEAD SEEKS ARMS CHILD’S STOOL IS GREAT FOR USE IN
GARDEN Lexical ambiguity: when a word has
more than one meaning
Structural ambiguity “I once shot an elephant in my pajamas.” “Tonight’s program will discuss sex with Dr.
Ruth Westheimer.” “We will not sell gasoline to anyone in a
glass container.” “This mixing bowl is designed to please any
cook with a round bottom for efficient beating.”
Structural ambiguity Ambiguity resulting from the structure
of the phrase or sentence
e.g. [shot [an elephant] [in my pajamas]]
[shot [an elephant in my pajamas]]
e.g. [discuss [sex with Dr. Ruth Westheimer]]
[discuss [sex] [with Dr. Ruth Westheimer]]
Structural ambiguitydiscuss [sex with Dr. Ruth] discuss [sex] [with Dr. Ruth]
VP VP
V NP V NP PP
discuss N PP discuss sex P NP
sex P NP with Dr. Ruth
with Dr. Ruth
Tests for Constituent structure Substitution Movement Deletion Coordination
Substitution: NP Substitute for NPs with pronouns (he,
she, it, they, etc.)
e.g., [Laura] will buy [the new Battlestar Galactica DVD] tomorrow.
Rita will buy it Wednesday.
She will buy ‘V’ for Vendetta Friday.
NP[the new BSG DVD]
NP[Laura]
Substitution: VP Substitute for VPs with do/done so
e.g., Laura has eaten lots of Halloween candy. Matt has done so too. Sandy will do so if we don’t stop her.
AUX (has, will, etc.) is outside the VP constituent.
S => NP Aux VP
Substitution test “The cow attacked the farmer with the
axe.” The cow attacked him.
NP: [the farmer with the axe] The cow attacked him with it.
him: NP[the farmer]
it: NP[the axe]
Movement Constituents can move to positions in the
sentence other than where they would normally go Obligatory: Question formation Optional: Topicalization
Word Order English is an SVO language:
Subject – Verb – Object
Harry rides brooms.
Ron makes jokes.
Trevor eats flies.
Obligatory Movement Question formation:
“Laura will drive her car on the weekend.”
What will Laura drive (her car) on the weekend?
When will Laura drive her car (on the weekend)?
Optional Movement Topicalization: optional movement used
to emphasize something I don’t like peas, but peanuts I like _____.
They didn’t think he could win the election, but win the election he did __________.
O - S - V
Movement test
“The cow attacked the farmer with the axe.”
Who did the cow attack _______________?
Who did the cow attack__________ with the axe?
the farmer with the axe
the farmer
Deletion A constituent can be deleted from a
phrase when there is an identical constituent in the discourse to supply its meaning
Deletion test “The cow attacked the farmer with the
axe.”
The cow is attacking the farmer with the axe.
The horse is ______, too.
Conjunctions Words and phrases of the same category
can be combined using conjunctions (e.g., and, but, or)
NP NP conj NP
VP VP conj VP
S S conj S
Cats and dogs are furry.
He will run and jump.
You can run but you can’t hide.
Conjoined phrases
NP
NPNP Conj
Det N Det N
the cat the dogand
NP NP Conj NP
NP Det N
Conjoined sentencesI bought a book, but I returned it.
S S S conj S
S conj S S NP VP
NP VP but NP VP
I V NP I V NP
bought a book returned it
Ungrammatical coordination Different categories cannot be
conjoinedJulia wrote a memo.
Julia wrote to the dean.
*Julia wrote [a memo] and [to the dean].
NP PP
Coordination testLaura loves linguistics.
Laura teaches enthusiastically.
Laura loves linguistics and teaches enthusiastically.
Conclusion:
[loves linguistics] and [teaches enthusiastically] are the same kind of constituent: VP
Coordination test Reveals information about
whether a group of words is a constituent what kind of constituent it is