Title: Sign Language Syntax I
1Sign Language Syntax I
- COGS 524, A. Hohenberger, Spring term 2007
- Sandler Lillo-Martin 2006,
- chapter 17,18 Syntax, clausal structure
2Syntax An introductionchapter 17
- What can research on the syntax of signed
languages tell us that we don't know yet from
spoken languages?
3Syntax of signed languages
4The generative approach
- Sandler Lillo-Martin take a generative approach
to syntax. - Generative Grammar, GG, is the tradition founded
by Chomsky in the late 50ies, which views
language as a cognitive module unto its own, with
domain specific constraints and an excentric
stimulus domain that comprises all spoken and
signed languages alike.
5The standard T-model
LF Logical Form Interface
PF
LF
surface structure
Transformations, Move-?
PF Phonetic Form Interface
deep structure
- In the classical T-model, words are projected
from the lexicon into the workspace of syntax
where phrases and sentences are built from them
which receive perceptual form (speech or sign)
and conceptual interpretation.
http//www.gnxp.com/blog/2006/07/pinker-and-jacken
doff-vs-chomsky.php
6From deep to surface structure
- Traditionally, it was held that there is a level
of deep structure where lexical and thematic
information is represented and - a level of surface structure where the overt,
linear word order is represented. - Both levels are related through transformations
or derivations (movement operations). - Since the Minimalist program, however, no such
distinct levels are assumed anymore, since it has
been doubted that there are distinct constraints
that hold on these presumed levels. Instead,
there is only syntax with its two interfaces,
PF and LF.
7D-and S-structure in Minimalism
http//spzwww.uni-muenster.de/griesha/spw/ug/stru
ktur-basics.html
8Minimalism
http//spzwww.uni-muenster.de/griesha/spw/ug/mini
malismus.html
9What is Universal Grammar, UG?
10What is Universal Grammar, UG?
- UG is a set of constraints on the possible format
of natural human languages. UG is thought to be
innate, domain specific (only for language) but
a-modal. - Sign languages have been readily integrated into
UG-accounts of language. Why? Because any theory
of UG, such as GG, is abstract enough to
disregard the form of the language and its
processing (in which sensory modality it is
conveyed and processed).
11UG Principles and Parameters
- In the Principles-and-Parameters Model of GG,
language is thought to include - (1) universal principles which apply to all
languages - (2) parameters, i.e., areas of (principled and
restricted) linguistic variation within which
languages can choose different values
12Structure and hierarchy
- Many linguistic phenomena are sensitive to
hierarchical structural relations. - A classical definition of such structural
relations is C-command.
13UG Principles and Parameters
14The head parameter
French is head initial
German is head final
http//spzwww.uni-muenster.de/griesha/spw/ug/para
ms-basics.html
15C-command From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia In grammar, the c-command relation
is a relationship between certain nodes in parse
trees. Originally defined by Tanya Reinhart, it
is analogous to the idea of "siblings and all
their descendants" in family trees. In the
following tree A c-commands C, D, and E.
B does not c-command any nodes. C
c-commands A. D c-commands E. E
c-commands D. B / \ A C / \ D E
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-command
16A node is said to "dominate" another node if it
is above it in the tree (it is a parent,
grandparent, etc.) The formal definition is that
X c-commands Y if X does not dominate
Y. Y does not dominate X. by some accounts,
the first node that dominates X also dominates
Y. by other accounts, the first branching node
that dominates X also dominates Y. The following
tree is an example of where the two accounts
differ in their result. If all nodes are
considered, then A does not c-command any other
nodes, because B dominates it and does not
dominate any other nodes if only branching nodes
are considered, then B is irrelevant in
evaluating the third criterion, and A c-commands
D, E, and F. C / \ B D \ A E F
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-command
17C (constituent command)
http//www.criticism.com/linguistics/govt-binding-
basics1.php
C-Command (1) Node A c-commands node B if and
only if (i) A does not dominate B and B does not
dominate A and (ii) the first branching node
dominating A also dominates B. C-Command (2) A
c-commands B if and only if A does not dominate B
and every X that dominates A also dominates
B. For the choice of X in C-command (2), two
options are considered. When X is equated with
the first branching node we obtain the c-command
definition given in C-command (1). This
structural relation is sometimes referred to as
strict c-command. Alternatively, X is interpreted
as a maximal projection. Under the latter
interpretation of (2), A m-commands B.
18An example
VP verbal phrase
Subject specifier
Verb head of phrase
Object complement
19Government
governing node V governing category verb 'visit'
X governs Y just in case (i) X is a
governing node c-commanding Y (ii) there is
no other governing node Z that (a) X
c-commands Z (b) Z c-commands Y
(c) Z does not c-command X
- Governing nodes are lexical categories (V, P, N,
A), TENSE, and POSS
http//spzwww.uni-muenster.de/griesha/spw/ug/basi
cs/gov.html
20Government
governing node p governing category Preposition
towards
http//spzwww.uni-muenster.de/griesha/spw/ug/basi
cs/gov.html
21An example A sentence, viewed in
Lexical-categorical grammar
- Thus, likes (and any transitive verb) is a
function that first looks for a direct object
noun to its right, and once applied to the
argument syntax, has closed off that argument
slot, becoming something like an intransitive
verb (i.e., likes-syntax). Then this likes-syntax
function looks for a subject noun to its left,
and once applied to the argument Chomsky closes
of its remaining argument slot. With no open
argument slots, we are left with a complete
sentence.
22Clausal structure in Signed Languages(chapter 18)
- We are used to saying
- English has SVO as basic word order
- Turkish and German have SOV as basic word order
- Do Sign Languages also have basic word order?
23What is the basic word order in ASL?
- SVO, as in
- (1a) MAN NOTICE CHILD
- Other word orders show intonational breaks
(pauses, non-manual markers) - (1b) CHILD, MAN NOTICE OSV--gt topicalization
- (1c) NOTICE CHILD, MAN VOS --gt VO topical.
24Variable word order
- With semantically non-reversible propositions,
word order is flexible - (2a) MAN MUST B-I-L-L PAY
- (2b) MAN MUST PAY B-I-L-L
- With idioms, SOV is also possible
- (4a) WATER TURN-FAUCET
- ('turn on water')
- (4b) MOVIE FLASH-FLASH
- ('take movies')
25Variable word order
- With AGR-verbs, also, word order is free. Here,
articulatory reasons make the OSV word order most
preferred - Indexj Indexi iASKj
- Hei asks herj.
- If the word order were SVO, the signing would
first localize the subject, then trace the verb
from the (yet unindexed) object to the subject
and then localize the object. That would make no
sense at all.
26SVO in questions
- Liddell shows that although word order may be
variable in declarative sentences, it is fix in
questions - q
- (5) WOMAN FORGET PURSE
27Topicalization
- In topicalization, any element may be fronted.
The topicalized constituent is marked
non-manually by raised eyebrows. - A topic is outside the sentence, which is
evidenced by negation of the root sentence.
Negation does not spill over to the topic, since
it is not in the c-command domain of the negative
marker - S0
- NP S1
- DOG S2 V
- CHASE CAT neg
V c-commands S2 but not NP DOG
28Word order and iconicity
- Some sentences are SOV since this is more
compatible with their mimetic content - (9b) WOMAN PIE PUT-IN-OVEN
29Word order in Classifier constructions
- In order to clarify the spatial relation between
the arguments, classifier constructions may also
have SOV - (11) FENCE 4-CL-----------------------------------
-- - CAT V-CL on 4-CL
- Locative Obj Loc Subj Loc predicate
- ground figure
- The cat is lying on the fence
30Word order and aspect
- If, due to aspect-inflection, the verb gets
heavier, it is shifted to the end of the
sentence (here a question) as well -
q - (12) TOMATO GIRL EATdurativeaspect
- 'Did the girl eat tomatoes for a long time?
31Padden's analysis Basic SV order
- Deviations of SV(O) word order are explained by a
multiclausal analysis, e.g. The CL construction
above - (11) FENCE 4-CL
- 'the fence is here' Sentence 1N CL
- -------------------------------------
- CAT V-CL on 4-CL
- 'and the cat is sitting on the fence
-
- Sentence 2 N CL
- According to this analysis, there are 2 sentences
both of which have a classifier predicate which
are clausal in nature.
32CL constructions as sentential complements
- Verbs that take clausal complements, like
THINK, can also take Cls as complements - Cls can be 'short answers' to questions, unlike
Ns - Facial adverbs that only occur with verbs, can
also occur with Cls
33Multiclausal CL constructions
- Some CL constructions which involve verbs in
final position, can also be accounted for by a
multi-clausal analysis - (22) MAN BOOK READ
- left hand CLB
- right hand MAN BOOK CLBB-OPEN READ
34AGR-Verbs multiclausal analysis
- For sentences involving Indexing and AGR-verbs,
Padden also provides a multiclausal analysis - (26) BOY iINDEX1 GIRL jINDEX2 iKICKj3
- If these are 3 clauses, the last of which is he
kicked her, then SVO order is preserved.
35Embedding
- One of the hallmarks of a natural language is
recursion. Embedded structures are an example of
recursion. - The basic distinction is between
- Parataxis coordination S1 and S2
- Hypotaxis embedding, subordination S1S2
36Negation A Test for embedding
- Non-manual negation can spread embedded
structures but not coordinated structures -
neg - (28a) 1INDEX WANT iINDEX GO-AWAY
- 'I didn't want him to leave.'
- neg
hn - (28b) 1INDEX TELEPHONE, iINDEX MAIL LETTER
- 'I didn't telephone but she sent a letter.'
37Manual markers of coordination
- While for embedding there are no markers
(manual), there are coordinating conjunctions
such as AND, OR, BUT in ASL. - --gt There is rich evidence that there are
embedded structures, hence, recursion, in SL.
38Generative approaches to PS
- X-bar architecture
- a head (X,X, X') combines with a complement to
form an X-bar (X'). X' combines with a specifier
to form a full phrase/ maximal projection (X'',
Xmax).
39Order in the x-bar module is parameterized
- The order between the subject and the verb can be
SV or VS - The order between the verb and the object can be
VO or OV - Given these 2 basic alternations, there are 4
possible clause structures - S-OV, S-VO, OV-S, VO-S,
40Functional projections standard clause structure
CP Complementizer Phrase TP Tense Phrase NEG
Negation Phrase AGR Agreement Phrase VP
Verbal Phrasev
- CP
- C TP
- T NEG-P
- NEG AGR-P
- AGR VP
- V ...
Further FCs Q Question Topic, Focus DET
Determiner AGR-S Agreement Subject AGR-O
Agreement Object Aspect
41Feature checking
- In minimalism, features such as Tense or
Agreement are checked within a particular
structural configuration the specifier-head
relation. Therefore, in principle, there must be
a separate projection for each functional
category.
42A big controversy Do SLs have hierarchical
structure?
- Bouchard Dubuisson (1995)
- NO!
- BD claim that word order is just one means to
express the relation between two linguistic
elements. Others are AGR CASE, and spatial
relations - If there is an alternative way to express the
relation, then the language does not have
structure
43The structure of the argument
- Physical relations between two expressions can be
instantiated by - Temporal order, sequence --gt spoken languages.
Here, structural relations are needed to tell the
underlying order of the elements which may not be
preserved on the surface, due to movement
processes. - Spatial order --gt signed languages. Which
elements go together is expressed by their
spatial arrangement. Such a language does not
need and therefore does not have structure. - At best, SLs are mixed systems which have a
structural option as an elsewhere condition in
case spatial relations do not obtain.
44Arguments against a non-structural account of SLs
45Arguments against a non-structural account of SLs
- Unclear how SLs should have no structures most of
the time but sometimes do have structure - All human languages do have structure and word
order. Therefore, WO does not cost anything. It
is a universal. - Seeming flexible word order can be accounted for
by movement processes, such as scrambling in
non-configurational languages.
46Accounting for flexible word order
- Mini-topicalization
- According to Fisher, in ASL an NP can move to any
available Specifier position. E.g., the object of
a verb can go to Spec VP and derive a SOV order.
47Accounting for flexible word order
- Split headedness
- V and P are head-initial in ASL. Romano (1991)
has suggested that FCs in general are head-final
and LCs are head-initial. - FC Functional category
- LC lexical category
48Head-initial VP and head-final IP and CP
- CP
- Spec C'
- IP C
- Spec I'
- VP I
- Spec V'
- V O
final
final
initial
49Head-initial VP and head-final IP and CP
(38b) ME FINISH SEE MOVIE
(38a) ME SEE MOVIE FINISH
- CP
- Spec C'
- IP C
- Spec I'
- VP I
- Spec V'
- V O
CP Spec C' IP C Spec I' VP I
Spec V' V O
finish
affix hopping
me
me
see
movie
finish
see
movie
50Only head-initial FCs
- While it may be that some categories are
head-inital and others are head-final, the cut
need not go through Functional and Lexical
categories, according to L-M S. - Others have suggested merely head-initial
structures, such as Neidle, Kegl, Petronio, and
colleagues. They have elaborated a highly complex
PS for ASL
51Partial syntactic tree by Neidle et al.
- TP
- T NegP
- Neg AspP
- Asp AGR-SP
- AGR-S AGR-OP
- AGR-O VP
- V ...
52Non-manual marking of FCs
- Typical for the approach of the Neidle group is
that they consider non-manual markers as the
heads of functional categories such as AGR-S and
AGR-O. - --gt Müge's presentation next week