Syntax 1 Wiki: Week 3: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Structure-of-all-signs.jpg]]
[[File:Structure-of-all-signs.jpg]]
Note that this feature structure is of the general format we specified for all feature structures:
# In the top left we find the feature structure type: ''sign''.
# Below the type, we find a column of a sign's features: PHON and SYNSEM.

Revision as of 11:38, 3 May 2017

Introduction

In the first two weeks of this course, we have dealt with 3 topics:

a. Parts of speech and their features, and typed feature structures. b. Predicate-argument Structure c. Feature structures.

This week, we are going to bring these topics together. Remember what the purpose of feature structures like the one below is:

[File:book-Webelhuth.jpg]]

Feature structures describe an object (represented by the feature structure type in the top-left) by describing the values of the features that are relevant for that object. Thus, for a book we find such features as TITLE and AUTHOR, but not PHONE-NUMBER. The entries in a book catalogue will then presumably all be different, since they describe different books with different properties (= values for features), but the entries are all going to be structured similarly, since each entry describes a book with a feature structure of type book.

Consider now the problem we face when we want to represent what speakers know about the words of their language. For simplicity's sake, we can assume that the speakers have something like a dictionary book in their heads, i.e. a long list of word entries. As in the book example above, the entry for each word will be different from the entries of all other words, but of course words have some features in common that we can capture in a feature structure type word. For instance, every word will have a PHONOLOGY feature whose value specifies the specific word's pronunciation. We are now beginning to define feature structure types for linguistic objects. Of course, as with every feature structure we will make sure that the features we postulate for a particular kind of linguistic object reflect the properties of that object!

Before we define the feature structure type word, it is economical to first define the feature structure type sign. The reason is that all words are signs and therefore words have all the properties of signs. Besides words (N, V, etc.), there is only one other specific type of sign, namely the syntactic phrase (NP, VP, etc.). So, our strategy will be the following:

  1. We define the most general feature structure type.
  2. When there are objects that are specific versions of the general type, we define types for them, declare the more specific types as subtypes of the more general type.
  3. In the definitions of the subtypes we only specify those features and values that those types have in addition to their super type.

The feature structure of type sign

So, in accordance with this procedure, we will define the type sign first. In preparation for this, we will look at a feature structure of type sign:

File:Structure-of-all-signs.jpg

Note that this feature structure is of the general format we specified for all feature structures:

  1. In the top left we find the feature structure type: sign.
  2. Below the type, we find a column of a sign's features: PHON and SYNSEM.