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Syntax III

Syntax III. November 19, 2012. Sentences. The basic phrase types include: NP, VP, AP, PP A basic sentence is an “inflectional phrase” (IP). The head of the IP is the tense of the verb. I = INFL = inflection = [+past] or [-past] The specifier of the IP is the subject NP.

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Syntax III

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  1. Syntax III November 19, 2012

  2. Sentences • The basic phrase types include: • NP, VP, AP, PP • A basic sentence is an “inflectional phrase” (IP). • The head of the IP is the tense of the verb. • I = INFL = inflection = [+past] or [-past] • The specifier of the IP is the subject NP. • The complement of the I is a VP. • If that complement is an NP, then it is called the object of the verb. • (Note: verbs have lots of different complement options.) • Let’s practice with: “The coach dropped the ball.”

  3. IP NP I’ Det N’ I VP the N [+past] V’ NP coach V Det N’ dropped the N ball Sentence Structure Note: the V in the VP must agree in tense with the I tense marker.

  4. IP NP I’ Det N’ I VP the N [+past] V’ NP coach V Det N’ dropped the N ball Sentence Structure Note: the V in the VP must agree in tense with the I tense marker.

  5. IP NP I’ Det N’ I VP the N will V’ NP coach V Det N’ drop the N ball Sentence Structure • Note: Auxiliaries show up in the I slot. • (Verbs after auxiliaries don’t display tense)

  6. IP NP I’ Det N’ I VP the N will V’ NP coach V Det N’ drop the N ball Sentence Terminology • The subject of a sentence (in English) is: • the NP specifier of the sentence IP.

  7. IP NP I’ Det N’ I VP the N will V’ NP coach V Det N’ drop the N ball Sentence Terminology • The object of a sentence (in English) is: • an NP complement of the main VP.

  8. English Case Marking • The form of some English pronouns changes, depending on whether they are subjects or objects. • For Example: • I know you. You know me. • He knows them. They know him. • We know her. She knows us. • But word order is still constrained: • *Her know we. • *Them knows he.

  9. Subject/Object Marking • In other languages, subjects and objects are specified by morphological inflections on nouns. • Example: Russian case marking • ja tita-ju knig-u “I read the book.” • I read-1st pers-sing. book-object • alternate order : ja knig-u tita-ju • alternate order: knig-u ja tita-ju • knig-a byla v komnat-e • book-subject was in room-object • “The book was in the room.”

  10. Building Trees from Scratch • Basic tips: • First identify the lexical category of each word. • Then build up phrase structure from right to left. • Note: words of type V, N, A or P will always project up to a phrase of the relevant type: • VP, NP, AP, PP, etc. • Other lexical categories (Determiners, Degree words, Qualifiers) function only as specifiers.

  11. Building Trees from Scratch • In working through the sentence from right to left… • If you encounter words like Determiners, Degree words, etc., • You should include them as specifiers of the current phrase. • If you encounter a word which can form the head of a phrase (V, N, A, P): • The current phrase is likely to be a complement of a larger phrase headed by that word. • (although it’s possible that the new phrase may be a specifier of the current one…)

  12. Phrase Structure Tests • When in doubt, you can attempt to apply the three phrase structure tests: • Substitution • Pronouns for noun phrases • “do so” for verb phrases • “there” for some prepositional phrases • Movement • Can you move the string of words, as a unit, to the front of the sentence? • Coordination • Try to link with a phrase of a known type.

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