Practical Grammar 9: Difference between revisions

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== Functional Control ==
== Complement Clauses ==


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Next, we come to the exciting topic of complement (= subordinate) clauses. Here are two examples:
* Go to <span class="newwin">[https://xlfg.labri.fr/ https://xlfg.labri.fr/]</span>.
* Create a new project and copy your previous grammar into your new project.
* On the basis of pages 102-108 in the textbook, make all the additions to the grammar that are necessary to yield the following o


(1) Ingrid tried to buy olives
(1) Fred thought that Lilly disappeared<br>
(2) Fred asked whether Lilly disappeared


[[File:Ingrid-tried-to-buy-olives-cs.JPG | 500px]] &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
There is nothing really special about these structures. As with prepositional phrases, we need
[[File:Ingrid-tried-to-buy-olives-fs.JPG | 500px]]
<br>


Make sure that your grammar makes the correct predictions for the sentence below:
# lexical items for the new verbs
# lexical items for the two complementizers ''that'' and ''whether''
# two new phrase structure rules.


(2) Ingrid buys olives <br>
We make the following assumptions:
(3) *Ingrid tried buys olives
-->


In this unit, we will extend the grammar to license sentences with verbs like 'try' and 'seems' which have interesting properties.  
# ''that'' and ''whether'' belong to the part of speech C (= complementizer).
# A complementizer combines with a following S to form another S.
# The C and the lower S are co-heads of the upper S.
# You need to add a new VP rule which allows a VP to consist of a V and an S. The S bears the GF '''COMP'''.
# Complementizers have no PRED value.


==''try (Control verb)''==
<span style="color: blue>Exercise 9 </span>


Notation:
1. Open Grammar Grammar 9 - 2026-02-04<br>
2. Implement the analysis for sentences (1)-(2) as described above.<br>
3. Parse. Your output should look exactly like the output decribed in the document Exercise-9-expected-output.pdf on Olat.


In the exercises of this unit, we will have to implement '''Control''': this means that a GF of the higher verb and the SUBJ of the higher verb's XCOMP are identical.
Note that the complementizers in (1) and (2) cannot be exchanged:


In XLFG, this is written as follows:
(3) *Fred asked that Lilly disappeared<br>
(4) *Fred thought whether Lilly disappeared


* (↑SUBJ) = (↑XCOMP SUBJ);  the SUBJ of the higher verb and the XCOMP's SUBJ are identical.
The reason is that there is an incompatibility of clause type information in (3) and (4): the verb ''thought'' requires a declarative clause as its COMP, but
* (↑OBJ) = (↑XCOMP SUBJ)the OBJ of the higher verb and the XCOMP's SUBJ are identical.
the word ''whether'' can only head interrogative clauses. In (4), we find the opposite incompatibility.


<span style="color: blue>Exercise 9.1 (based on section pages 102-103 and 108-110 of the textbook)</span>
<span style="color: blue>Exercise 10 </span>
* Go to <span class="newwin">[https://xlfg.labri.fr/ https://xlfg.labri.fr/]</span>.
* Create a new project and copy your previous grammar into your new project.
* Make sure that under 'Output Parameters' '''Extended Coherence test on Feature-Structures''' is set to'''Yes'''.
* On the basis of pages 102-108 in the textbook, make all the additions to the grammar that are necessary to yield the following outputs for sentence (1):


(1) Ingrid tried to buy olives.
1. Open your current version of Grammar Grammar 9 - 2026-02-04<br>
2. Add the feature CLAUSE_TYPE to the lexical entries that need it so that (3)-(4) are not accepted by the grammar for the reasons stated above, but (1)-(2) stay grammatical.<br>
3. Parse. Your output should look exactly like the output decribed in the document Exercise-9-expected-output.pdf on Olat.


[[File:Ingrid-tried-to-buy-olives-cs.JPG | 500px]] &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
[[File:Ingrid-tried-to-buy-olives-fs.JPG | 500px]]
<br>
Implement the following grammatical assumptions:
* 'to' (the infinitive marker): assume that it is marked [IM:+].
* 'buy': [VFORM:INF]
Make sure that your grammar makes the correct predictions for the sentences below:
(2) Ingrid buys olives <br>
(3) *Ingrid tried buys olives
==''seem(Raising verb)''==
(4) Ingrid seemed to buy olives.
(2) Ingrid seemed to buy olives
[[File:Ingrid-seemed-to-buy-olives-csJPG.JPG | 500px]] &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
[[File:Ingrid-seemd-to-buy-olives-fs.JPG | 500px]]
[[File:Ingrid-seemed-to-buy-olives-as.JPG | 500px]]
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Extended Coherence Condition [non-final version] (p. 138)
* All governable functions present in an f-structure must occur in the value of a local PRED feature.
* All functions that have a PRED value must have a theta role.




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Latest revision as of 10:39, 4 February 2026

Complement Clauses

Next, we come to the exciting topic of complement (= subordinate) clauses. Here are two examples:

(1) Fred thought that Lilly disappeared
(2) Fred asked whether Lilly disappeared

There is nothing really special about these structures. As with prepositional phrases, we need

  1. lexical items for the new verbs
  2. lexical items for the two complementizers that and whether
  3. two new phrase structure rules.

We make the following assumptions:

  1. that and whether belong to the part of speech C (= complementizer).
  2. A complementizer combines with a following S to form another S.
  3. The C and the lower S are co-heads of the upper S.
  4. You need to add a new VP rule which allows a VP to consist of a V and an S. The S bears the GF COMP.
  5. Complementizers have no PRED value.

Exercise 9

1. Open Grammar Grammar 9 - 2026-02-04
2. Implement the analysis for sentences (1)-(2) as described above.
3. Parse. Your output should look exactly like the output decribed in the document Exercise-9-expected-output.pdf on Olat.

Note that the complementizers in (1) and (2) cannot be exchanged:

(3) *Fred asked that Lilly disappeared
(4) *Fred thought whether Lilly disappeared

The reason is that there is an incompatibility of clause type information in (3) and (4): the verb thought requires a declarative clause as its COMP, but the word whether can only head interrogative clauses. In (4), we find the opposite incompatibility.

Exercise 10

1. Open your current version of Grammar Grammar 9 - 2026-02-04
2. Add the feature CLAUSE_TYPE to the lexical entries that need it so that (3)-(4) are not accepted by the grammar for the reasons stated above, but (1)-(2) stay grammatical.
3. Parse. Your output should look exactly like the output decribed in the document Exercise-9-expected-output.pdf on Olat.