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

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==== The parts of speech ''v'' and ''g'' ====
==== The parts of speech ''v'' and ''g'' ====


''v'' and ''g'', the parts of speech of verbs (including auxiliaries) and verbal gerunds, inherit from the types ''subst'', ''verbal'', and ''verb''. In the first column of the following tables, a type in a higher row is a supertype of all types in lower rows.
''v'' is the part of speech of all verbs and auxiliaries, including the infinitive marker ''to''.  ''g'' represents verbal gerunds.
 
The table below is to be interpreted as follows. In the leftmost column, we find parts of speech. The top-to-bottom order represents the immediate subtype relationship, i.e. ''verbal'' is an immediate subtype of ''subst'', ''verb'' is an immediate subtype of ''verbal'', and both ''v'' and ''g'' are immediate subtypes of ''verb''.
 
The second column lists the features introduced by each part of speech, followed in the third column by the value type of the feature, and finally a short statement of the function of the feature in distinguishing different subgroups of the part(s) of speech under discussion.


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
! Part of speech !! Feature !! Value type!! Encoding function
! Part of speech !! Feature !! Value type!! Function of the feature
|-
|-
| ''subst'' || PRED || ''boolean'' || predicative expression
| ''subst'' || PRED || ''boolean'' || predicative expression

Revision as of 17:16, 21 April 2017

The Argument Realization Principle (ARP)

Recall that in GS the syntactic arguments of a word are in a sense represented twice: once on the ARG-ST (argument structure) list which, among others, is used for Binding Theory, and again on one of the valence lists SUBJ, SPR, and COMPS. Rather than being arbitrary, the relationship between the ARG-S and the valence lists is governed by the Argument Realization Principle:

GS-p23-nr7.jpg

In words, the principle says that the ARG-ST list is the result of merging the three valence lists into one list, with the elements of the SUBJ list coming first, followed by the elements on the SPR list, followed by the elements on the COMPS list.

Besides the ARP, the valence properties of words depend on their part of speech. Thus, all words of part of speech v must have a SUBJ list with exactly one element on it and a SPR list which is empty. In combination with the ARP, verbs of part of speech v thus must have the following properties:

  1. The ARG-ST must have at least one element on it.
  2. The first element of the ARG-ST is also the single element on the SUBJ list.
  3. If there are additional elements on the ARG-ST, then these elements also occur on the COMPS list.
  4. The elements which appear both on the ARG-ST and the COMPS list, appear in the same order on both lists.

The following Exercises on the append relation have the purpose of showing that the 4 statements above must be true.

Exercises on the Argument Realization Principle


Head Features

The parts of speech are divided into two classes, the substantive parts of speech and the functional parts of speech.

The parts of speech v and g

v is the part of speech of all verbs and auxiliaries, including the infinitive marker to. g represents verbal gerunds.

The table below is to be interpreted as follows. In the leftmost column, we find parts of speech. The top-to-bottom order represents the immediate subtype relationship, i.e. verbal is an immediate subtype of subst, verb is an immediate subtype of verbal, and both v and g are immediate subtypes of verb.

The second column lists the features introduced by each part of speech, followed in the third column by the value type of the feature, and finally a short statement of the function of the feature in distinguishing different subgroups of the part(s) of speech under discussion.

Part of speech Feature Value type Function of the feature
subst PRED boolean predicative expression
MOD mod-synsem modified synsem or none
verbal VFORM vform verb form
IC boolean independent clause
verb AUX boolean auxiliary construction
POL boolean polarized auxiliary (not, TOO, so)
INV boolean inverted auxiliary
v, g