Syntax. Andrew Carnie

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Syntax - Andrew Carnie

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in these constructions, even though you can’t hear it. In cases like the verb run, we’ll simply claim that there are two verbs to run: one that takes an object and one that doesn’t.

      5. CONCLUSION

       IDEAS, RULES, AND CONSTRAINTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER

      1 Parts of Speech(a.k.a. Word Class, Syntactic Categories): The labels we give to constituents (N, V, Adj, Adv, D, P, C, T, Neg, Conj). These determine the position of the word in the sentence.

      2 Distribution: Parts of speech are determined based on their distribution. We have both morphological distribution (what affixes are found on the word) and syntactic distribution (what other words are nearby).

      3 Complementary Distribution: When you have two categories and they never appear in the same environment (context), you have complementary distribution. Typically complementary distribution means that the two categories are subtypes of a larger class.

      4 Parts of speech that are Open Class can take new members or coinages: N, V, Adj, Adv.

      5 Parts of speech that are Closed Class don’t allow new coinages: D, P, Conj, C, T, Neg, and the pronoun and anaphor subcategories of N.

      6 Lexical Categories express the content of the sentence. N (including pronouns), V, Adj, Adv.

      7 Functional Categories contain the grammatical information in a sentence: D, P, Conj, T, Neg, C.

      8 Subcategories: The major parts of speech can often be divided up into subtypes. These are called subcategories.

      9 Feature Notations on major categories are a mechanism for indicating subcategories.

      10 Plurality refers to the number of nouns. It is usually indicated in English with an -s suffix. Plural nouns in English do not require a determiner.

      11 Count vs. Mass: Count nouns can appear with determiners and the quantifier many. Mass nouns appear with much and usually don’t have articles.

      12 The Predicate defines the relation between the individuals being talked about and some fact about them, as well as relations among the arguments.

      13 Argument Structure: The number of arguments that a predicate takes.

      14 The Arguments are the entities that are participating in the predicate relation.

      15 Intransitive: A predicate that takes only one argument.

      16 Transitive: A predicate that takes two arguments.

      17 Ditransitive: A predicate that takes three arguments.

       GPS1. NOUNS

       [Application of Skills; Basic]

      Identify all the nouns in the following passage from The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.12 You can ignore pronouns like I, he, my, whom, her, and me – although these are, of course, nouns as well.

      The lamps had been lit, but the blinds had not been drawn, so that I could see Holmes as he lay upon the couch. I do not know whether he was seized with compunction at that moment for the part he was playing, but I know that I never felt more heartily ashamed of myself in my life than when I saw the beautiful creature against whom I was conspiring, or the grace and kindliness with which she waited upon the injured man. And yet it would be the blackest treachery to Holmes to draw back now from the part which he had entrusted to me. I hardened my heart, and took the smoke-rocket from under my ulster. After all, I thought, we are not injuring her. We are but preventing her from injuring another.

       GPS2. VERBS

       [Application of Skills; Basic]

      Using the passage above in question 1, identify all the verbs. Do not worry about modals and auxiliary verbs. So ignore had, been, could, do, was, would, be, and are (all of which are of category T).

       GPS3. ADJECTIVES AND ADVERBS

       [Application of Skills; Basic]

      Using the passage above in question 1, identify all the adjectives and adverbs.

       GPS4. PREPOSITIONS

       [Application of Skills; Basic]

      Using the passage above in question 1, identify all the prepositions.

       [Application of Skills; Basic]

      Identify the main parts of speech (i.e., Nouns, Verbs, Adjectives/Adverbs, and Prepositions) in the following sentences. Treat hyphenated words as single words:

      1 The old rusty pot-belly stove has been replaced.

      2 The red-haired assistant put the vital documents through the new efficient shredder.

      3 The large evil leathery alligator complained to her aging keeper about her extremely unattractive description.

      4 I just ate the last piece of chocolate cake.

       GPS6. NOOTKA

       [Application of Skills; Intermediate]

      Consider the following data from Nootka (data from Sapir and Swadesh 1939), a language spoken in British Columbia, Canada, and answer the questions that follow.

      a) Mamu:k-ma qu:ʔas-ʔi.

      working-PRES man-DEF

      “The man is working.”

      b) Qu:ʔas-ma mamu:k-ʔi.

      man-PRES working-DEF

      “The working one is a man.”

      (The: mark indicates a long vowel. ʔ is a glottal stop. PRES in the second line means “present tense”, DEF means “definite determiner” (the).)

      Questions

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