Practical Grammar 3: Difference between revisions

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The source of the problem pointed out above is easy to spot: English determiners and nouns can both be singular or plural and in an NP of the form 'D N' the two words have to agree in number: either they are both singular or both plural. This is shown by (1)-(4).
The source of the problem pointed out above is easy to spot: English determiners and nouns can both be singular or plural and in an NP of the form 'D N' the two words have to agree in number: either they are both singular or both plural. This is shown by (1)-(4).


What this shows, is that so far, the grammar does not contain enough information about words. Besides a part of speech, words also have '''inflectional features''' and the values of these features are regulated in the syntax (this is why these features are also called 'morphosyntactic features': they determine the morphological shape of words, but there distribution is determined by the syntax).
What this shows, is that so far, the grammar does not contain enough information about words. Besides a part of speech, words also have '''inflectional features''' and the values of these features are regulated in the syntax (this is why these features are also called ''morphosyntactic features'': they determine the morphological shape of words, but there distribution is determined by the syntax).





Revision as of 08:51, 10 November 2020

Features

The lexical entries in Grammar 1 all looked like the following:

this D;
those D;
bottle N;
bottles N;

Together with the rule

NP -> D N;

the grammar accepts all the following strings as grammatical:

(1) this bottle
(2) *those bottle
(3) those bottles
(4) *those bottle

In this unit, we will change the grammar so that it makes the correct predictions about (1)-(4).

The source of the problem pointed out above is easy to spot: English determiners and nouns can both be singular or plural and in an NP of the form 'D N' the two words have to agree in number: either they are both singular or both plural. This is shown by (1)-(4).

What this shows, is that so far, the grammar does not contain enough information about words. Besides a part of speech, words also have inflectional features and the values of these features are regulated in the syntax (this is why these features are also called morphosyntactic features: they determine the morphological shape of words, but there distribution is determined by the syntax).







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