Practical Grammar 4

From English Grammar
Revision as of 11:02, 14 November 2020 by Gert (talk | contribs) (→‎Exercise 4)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Verbs and VPs

Next, we want to associate verbs and VPs with reasonable f-structures. As with NPs, we do this in two steps:

a. We add appropriate features to the lexical entries of verbs, and b. we add the correct annotation to the VP-rules, so that each node in the VP tree gets the desired f-structure.

Features of verbs

Let us look at the following sentences:

(1) I am happy. (2) They are happy. (3) I was happy.

Exercise

In the previous unit, we formulated the following annotated c-structure rule for combining a D and an N into NP:

1. NP -> D N
2. {
3.  ↑=↓1;
4.  ↑=↓2;
5. }

Let us now turn to the rule that combines a V and an NP into a VP:

VP -> V NP;

Exercise 4

State which feature the constrast between (1) and (3) motivates. What are the feature's possible values?

Check your answer

The feature is TENSE and its possible values are pres, past, future.


Exercise 4

State which features the constrast between (1) and (2) motivates. What are the features' possible values?

Check your answer

The contrast motivates two features:
a. The feature PERSON whose possible values are 1, 2, and 3.
b. The feature NUMBER whose possible values are sg and pl.





♣ Add the following test sentences to your grammar and tell the program that they are ungrammatical:

(1) *John [disappeared the hospital].
(2) *Martha [stayed the hospital].
(3) *Fred [resides].
(4) *Joe [saw Fred John].
(5) *John [sent Martha to a check].
(6) *We [gave Fred].

♣ Parse each sentence.
♣ Does the grammar make the right prediction?
♣ If not, formulate in grammatical terms what the problem seems to be.

The PRED feature and valence

Valence is the representation of the knowledge speakers have about what other kinds of constituents a word needs to combine with. You will remember from traditional grammar the distinction between intransitive and transitive verbs. These are just names for those verbs, respectively, which do not need a direct object (i.e. the verb disappear) and those which do (like see).

(1)
John disappeared.
[PRED   'DISAPPEAR<SUBJ>']

(2)
The bottle broke.
[PRED   'BREAK<SUBJ>']

(3)
Joe saw Fred.
[PRED   'SEE<SUBJ,OBJ>']

(4)
Alice broke the bottle.
[PRED   'SEE<SUBJ,OBJ>']

(5)
John sent Martha a check.
[PRED   'SEE<SUBJ,OBJ,OBJ-TH>']

(6)
We gave Fred a wastebasket.
[PRED   'SEE<SUBJ,OBJ,OBJ-TH>']


PER 3
NUM sg
DEF -