Title: Creativity%20of%20Language
1Creativity of Language
- Any speaker of a human language can produce
and understand an infinite number of sentences.
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2003. An Introduction to Language. Boston, MA
Wadsworth, p. 117.
2 Syntax
- The part of the grammar that represents a
speakers knowledge of sentences and their
structures is called syntax.
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2003. An Introduction to Language. Boston, MA
Wadsworth, p. 118.
3 4 Word Order
- 1. Harold hit Ivan.
- 2. Ivan hit Harold.
- 3. The student picked up the book.
- 4. The student picked the book up.
5Why Native Speaker Grammaticality Judgments are
Basically the Same
- Because native speakers of a language share
the same set of syntactic rules their
grammaticality judgments will be the same.
6How can we judge what is grammatical?
- 1. Does NOT depend on whether you have
- heard it before
- 2. Does NOT depend on whether it is
- meaningful
- 3. Does NOT depend on whether you can
- interpret it
- 4. Does NOT depend on whether it is true
- 5. It DOES depend on our unconscious
- knowledge of the syntactic rules of
grammar
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2003. An Introduction to Language. Boston, MA
Wadsworth, pp. 120-121.
7Grammaticality Judgments of Strange Sentences
- ? Meaningless
- Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
- Giant tomatoes danced at my party
- last week.
- ? Uninterpretable
- Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
- did gyre and gimble in the wabe.
- ? Untrue
- Today is Wednesday.
- My brother had a baby last week.
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2003. An Introduction to Language. Boston, MA
Wadsworth, pp. 120-121
8 Ambiguity
- Words (Lexical Ambiguity)
- He walked by the bank.
- He got shot in the back.
- Phrases (Structural Ambiguity)
- synthetic buffalo hides
- small car factory
- Sentences (Structural Ambiguity)
- The boy saw the man with the telescope.
- For sale an antique desk suitable for lady
- with thick legs and large drawers.
9 Tree Diagram of Sentence Structure
- The child found the puppy.
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2003. An Introduction to Language. Boston, MA
Wadsworth, p. 124.
10Grammatical Categories
- Content Words
- noun N
- verb V
- adjective Adj
- adverb Adv
- Function Words
- preposition Prep
- conjunction Conj
- interjection Interj
- auxiliary verb Aux
- modal verb Modal
- determiner Det
- quantifier Quant
11Phrase Structure Tree
- Victoria Fromkin Robert Rodman. An
Introduction to Language, sixth edition. Forth
Worth Harcourt Brace College Publishers 1998,
pp. 114, 115.
12 Syntactic Rules Must Account for the Following
- ? the grammaticality of sentences
- ? word order
- ? structural ambiguity
- ? grammatical relations
- ? different structures with the same meaning
- ? the creative aspect of language.
- Fromkin Rodman (1998), pp. 110-111
13 Simplified Grammar of EnglishPhrase
Structure Rules
- S ? NP Aux VP
- NP ? Det (Adj) N
- VP ? V (NP) (PP)
- PP ? P NP
- AP ? Adj (PP)
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2003. An Introduction to Language. Boston, MA
Wadsworth, p. 140.
14Simplified Grammar of EnglishPhrase Structure
Rules
- N ? child, boy, man, men, telescope,
- puppy, posse, baby, buffalo,
hide - V ? find, see, flee, sleep
- P ? with, from, in, on
- Adj ? small, synthetic
- Det ? the, a
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2003. An Introduction to Language. Boston, MA
Wadsworth, p. 140.
15Ambiguous Sentence But Unambiguous Structure
- The boy saw the man with the telescope.
- The boy saw the man with a stick.
- The boy hit the man with a stick.
- The boy hit the man with the telescope.
Victoria Fromkin Robert Rodman. An
Introduction to Language, sixth edition. Forth
Worth Harcourt Brace College Publishers 1998,
p. 117.
16 Grammaticality Judgments
- Victoria Fromkin Robert Rodman. An
Introduction to Language, sixth edition. Forth
Worth Harcourt Brace College Publishers 1998,
p. 107.