Grammar and Syntax
Grammar and Syntax
So you think you know grammar? All well and good, but which type of grammar do you know?
Linguists are quick to remind us that there are different varieties of grammar--that is, different ways
of describing and analyzing the structures and functions of language.
But that's just the beginning. Consider these varieties of grammar and take your pick. (For more
information about a particular type, click on the highlighted term.)
Comparative Grammar
The analysis and comparison of the grammatical structures of related languages is known
as comparative grammar. Contemporary work in comparative grammar is concerned with "a faculty
of language that provides an explanatory basis for how a human being can acquire a first language
. . .. In this way, the theory of grammar is a theory of human language and hence establishes the
relationship among all languages" (R. Freidin, Principles and Parameters in Comparative
Grammar. MIT Press, 1991).
Generative Grammar
Generative grammar includes the rules determining the structure and interpretation of sentences
that speakers accept as belonging to the language. "Simply put, a generative grammar is a theory
of competence: a model of the psychological system of unconscious knowledge that underlies a
speaker's ability to produce and interpret utterances in a language" (F. Parker and K.
Riley, Linguistics for Non-Linguists. Allyn and Bacon, 1994).
Mental Grammar
The generative grammar stored in the brain that allows a speaker to produce language that other
speakers can understand is mental grammar. "All humans are born with the capacity for
constructing a Mental Grammar, given linguistic experience; this capacity for language is called the
Language Faculty (Chomsky, 1965). A grammar formulated by a linguist is an idealized description
of this Mental Grammar" (P. W. Culicover and A. Nowak, Dynamical Grammar: Foundations of
Syntax II. Oxford University Press, 2003).
Pedagogical Grammar
Grammatical analysis and instruction designed for second-language students. "Pedagogical
grammar is a slippery concept. The term is commonly used to denote (1) pedagogical process--the
explicit treatment of elements of the target language systems as (part of) language teaching
methodology; (2) pedagogical content--reference sources of one kind or another that present
information about the target language system; and (3) combinations of process and content" (D.
Little, "Words and Their Properties: Arguments for a Lexical Approach to Pedagogical
Grammar." Perspectives on Pedagogical Grammar, ed. by T. Odlin. Cambridge University Press,
1994).
Performance Grammar
A description of the syntax of English as it is actually used by speakers in dialogues.
"[P]erformance grammar . . . centers attention on language production; it is my belief that the
problem of production must be dealt with before problems of reception and comprehension can
properly be investigated" (John Carroll, "Promoting Language Skills." Perspectives on School
Learning: Selected Writings of John B. Carroll, ed. by L. W. Anderson. Erlbaum, 1985).
Reference Grammar
A description of the grammar of a language, with explanations of the principles governing the
construction of words, phrases, clauses, and sentences. Examples of contemporary reference
grammars in English include A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language, by Randolph
Quirk et al. (1985), the Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English (1999), and The
Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (2002).
Theoretical Grammar
The study of the essential components of any human language. "Theoretical grammar or syntax is
concerned with making completely explicit the formalisms of grammar, and in providing scientific
arguments or explanations in favour of one account of grammar rather than another, in terms of a
general theory of human language" (A. Renouf and A. Kehoe, The Changing Face of Corpus
Linguistics. Rodopi, 2003).
Traditional Grammar
The collection of prescriptive rules and concepts about the structure of the language. "We say
that traditional grammar is prescriptive because it focuses on the distinction between what some
people do with language and what they ought to do with it, according to a pre-established
standard. . . . The chief goal of traditional grammar, therefore, is perpetuating a historical model of
what supposedly constitutes proper language" (J. D. Williams, The Teacher's Grammar Book.
Routledge, 2005).
Transformational Grammar
A theory of grammar that accounts for the constructions of a language by linguistic transformations
and phrase structures. "In transformational grammar, the term 'rule' is used not for a precept set
down by an external authority but for a principle that is unconsciously yet regularly followed in the
production and interpretation of sentences. A rule is a direction for forming a sentence or a part of
a sentence, which has been internalized by the native speaker" (D. Bornstein, An Introduction to
Transformational Grammar. University Press of America, 1984)
Universal Grammar
The system of categories, operations, and principles shared by all human languages and
considered to be innate. "Taken together, the linguistic principles of Universal Grammar constitute
a theory of the organization of the initial state of the mind/brain of the language learner--that is, a
theory of the human faculty for language" (S. Crain and R. Thornton, Investigations in Universal
Grammar. MIT Press, 2000).
If 10 varieties of grammar aren't enough for you, rest assured that new grammars are emerging all
the time. There's word grammar, for instance. And relational grammar. Not to mention case
grammar, cognitive grammar, construction grammar, lexical functional
grammar, lexicogrammar, head-driven phrase structure grammar and many more.
LANGUAGE FACULTY
LINGUISTICS
Sound
o Phonetics
o Phonology
Form
o Word form
Morphology
o Sentence structure
Syntax
Meaning
o Semantics
o Pragmatics
SCIENTIFIC METHOD
Observe data
Make generalizations
Develop a hypothesis
Test again using more data
SYNTAX
Pronouns
R-Expressions
o Nouns
Common
Proper
Anaphors
o Reflexive pronouns
GRAMMAR
Observationally adequate
Descriptively adequate
o Observations + acceptability judgements
Generalizations
Explanatory adequate
o Observations, acceptability, generalizations + lg acquisition
Parts of speech
Semantic (classical)
Distributional
o Morphological
o Syntactic
Open class
o Content words
Closed class
o Function words
STRUCTURE CONSTITUENT
CONSTITUENCY TEST
Replacement
Movement (we need to use more than 1 test to check if it is a constituency)
o Passive
o Clefting
o Preposing
“I like half pound steaks” “half pound steaks is what I like”
Modification
Ellipsis (for verbs) / deletion *
Stand-alone
Co-ordination / conjunction
TREES
PSR
1. What must occur?
2. What is optional? ( )
3. What can be repeated? +
4. What relative order exists?
TENSE PHRASE
(TP ) SENTENCE
MODAL
AUX
TP
VP
NP T V NP
Mary will eat apples
TP {NP / CP } (T) VP
Structural relations
o Mother
o Daughter
o Sisters
Nodes
o Root node
Has no mother (1)
o Non- terminal node (branching node)
Has branches (1-3)
o Terminal node (non-branching node)
Has no daughters
Domination
General domination
o A dominates everything under it
Immediate domination
o B immediately dominates D , E , F
Interveners block domination
Exhaustive domination
o Node X exhaustively dominates a set of terminal nodes if
all members of the set are dominates
No terminal node is dominated by X is not part of the set
B exhaustively dominates D, E ,F
H exhaustively dominates J, K
Precedence
C-Command
General c-command
o Relation where we go up once and down as much as we want.
o B c-commands C. B c-commands H.
o C c-commands B.
Symmetric c-command
o When 2 nodes mutually c—command each other.
o They are sisters
Asymmetric c-command
o When 1 node c-commands another but not the other way around
o B c-commands D, but D doesn’t c-command B
Subject
o Is the daughter of TP
o It can be a CP or an NP
Objects
o Direct
Given to the benefit of another
o Indirect
Beneficiary
“To Mary” is an IO
o O/P
Mary is an O/P
Oblique
o Any NP / PP that isn’t a subject or an object
Binding
Binding Principles
X-Bar notation
The DP hypothesis
Clauses
The CP in X-bar
The TP in X-bar
Constraining X-bar