Constraint-based Syntax 2: Week 3: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 13:12, 25 April 2017

Maximal phrase types

In Week 1, the following 3 phrase types were introduced: hd-subj-ph, hd-spr-ph, and hd-comp-ph.

Head-Specifier Phrases

Exercise: parse the 3 expressions cat, a, and a cat in order to see how the valence features of the noun drive the formation of the hd-spr-ph the cat.

Online Grammar for Chapter 2: HPSG Background

For the moment, there is little more to say about head-specifier phrases.

Clauses and non-clauses

Following traditional grammar, GS make use of the concept of clauses, i.e. declarative clauses, interrogative clauses, etc. All clauses are phrases, but there are of course non-clausal phrases as well, for instance, VPs, NPs, APs, and PPs. In order to license these non-clausal phrases, GS postulate the following subtypes of hd-comp-ph, to which we have added the subtype sbjn-vp to license subjunctive VPs:

Subtype Full name Example
fin-vp Finite verb phrase snores, likes Fido
sbjn-vp Subjunctive verb phrase dance, smile
nf-hc-ph Non-finite head-complement phrase dancing, depended on Fido, afraid of Fido, picture of Lilly
cp-ph Complementizer phrase that Lilly danced, for Lilly to like Fido

Exercise: parse all of the examples above and examine the structure of the respective phrases and how they are licensed by the information in the head daughter (HEAD, VFORM, and COMPS).

Online Grammar for Chapter 2: HPSG Background

Clauses

All clauses have in common that they are phrases and that they must have a content of type message, as follows:

Clause type Full name Content value Examples
decl-clause declarative clause austinian Lilly danced.
inter-clause interrogative clause question Does Lilly dance?, Who danced?
imp-clause imperative clause outcome Dance!
excl-clause exclamative clause fact What a cat!, Is Lilly smart!

Head-Complement Phrases



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