1、语言学 第四章 树形图 句法精品文档Chapter 4 From word to Text (Syntax)Syntax (grammar) Syntax refers to the study of the rules governing the way different constituents are combined to form sentences in a language, or the study of the interrelationships between elements in sentence structures.4.1 Syntactic relations
2、 Syntactic relations can be analyzed into three kinds: 4.1.1 positional relation 4.1.2 relations of substitutability 4.1.3 relations of co-occurrence4.1.1 Positional Relation For language to fulfill its communicative function, it must have a way to mark the grammatical roles of the various phrases t
3、hat can occur in a clause. The boy kicked the ball NP1 NP2 Subject Object Positional relation, or WORD ORDER, refers to the sequential arrangement of words in a language. If the words in a sentence fail to occur in a fixed order required by the convention of a language, one tends to produce an utter
4、ance either ungrammatical or nonsensical at all. For example, The boy kicked the ball *Boy the ball kicked the *The ball kicked the boy The teacher saw the students The students saw the teacher Positional relations are a manifestation of one aspect of Syntagmatic Relations observed by F. de Saussure
5、. They are also called Horizontal Relations or simply Chain Relations. Word order is among the three basic ways (word order, genetic and areal classifications) to classify languages in the world. There are 6 possible types of language: SVO, VSO, SOV, OVS, OSV, and VOS. English belongs to SVO type, t
6、hough this does not mean that SVO is the only possible word order. 4.1.2 Relation of Substitutability The Relation of Substitutability refers to classes or sets of words substitutable for each other grammatically in sentences with the same structure. The_ smiles. man boy girl It also refers to group
7、s of more than one word which may be jointly substitutable grammatically for a single word of a particular set. strong man The tallest boy smiles. pretty girlyesterday. He went therelast week.the day before. This is also called Associative Relations by Saussure, and Paradigmatic Relations by Hjemsle
8、v. To make it more understandable, they are called Vertical Relations or Choice Relations. 4.1.3 Relation of Co-occurrence It means that words of different sets of clauses may permit, or require, the occurrence of a word of another set or class to form a sentence or a particular part of a sentence.
9、For instance, a nominal phrase can be preceded by a determiner and adjective(s) and followed by a verbal phrase. Relations of co-occurrence partly belong to syntagmatic relations, partly to paradigmatic relations. 4.2 Grammatical construction and its constituents 4.2.1 Grammatical Construction Any s
10、yntactic string of words ranging from sentences over phrasal structures to certain complex lexemes. an apple ate an apple Mary ate an apple4.2.2 Immediate Constituents Constituent is a part of a larger linguistic unit. Several constituents together form a construction: the girl (NP) ate the apple (V
11、P) The girl ate the apple (S)Immediate Constituent Analysis(IC Analysis) In the case of the above example, if two constituents B (the girl) and C (ate the apple) are jointed to form a hierarchically higher constituent A (here a sentence S), then B and C are said to be the immediate constituents of A
12、. To dismantle a grammatical construction in this way is called IC analysis. A (Sentence) B CThe boy ate the appleTwo ways: tree diagram and bracketing Tree diagram: Bracketing Bracketing is not as common in use, but it is an economic notation in representing the constituent/phrase structure of a gr
13、ammatical unit. (The) (girl)(ate)(the) (apple) SNPDet TheN girlVPV ateNPDet theN apple4.2.3 Endocentric and Exocentric Constructions Endocentric construction is one whose distribution is functionally equivalent to that of one or more of its constituents, i.e., a word or a group of words, which serve
14、s as a definable centre or head. Usually noun phrases, verb phrases and adjective phrases belong to endocentric types because the constituent items are subordinate to the Head. Exocentric construction refers to a group of syntactically related words where none of the words is functionally equivalent
15、 to the group as a whole, that is, there is no definable “Centre” or “Head” inside the group, usually including the basic sentence, the prepositional phrase, the predicate (verb + object) construction, the connective (be + complement) construction. The boy smiled. (Neither constituent can substitute
16、 for the sentence structure as a whole.) He hid behind the door. (Neither constituent can function as an adverbial.) He kicked the ball . (Neither constituent stands for the verb-object sequence.) John seemed angry. (After division, the connective construction no longer exists.)4.2.4 Coordination an
17、d Subordination Endocentric constructions fall into two main types, depending on the relation between constituents: 1) Coordination Coordination is a common syntactic pattern in English and other languages formed by grouping together two or more categories of the same type with the help of a conjunc
18、tion such as and, but and or . These two or more words or phrases or clauses have equivalent syntactic status, each of the separate constituents can stand for the original construction functionally. Coordination of NPs: NP the lady or NP the tiger Coordination of VPs: VP go to the library and VP rea
19、d a book Coordination of PPs: PP down the stairs and PP out the door Coordination of APs: AP quite expensive and AP very beautiful Coordination of Ss: S John loves Mary and S Mary loves John too.2) Subordination Subordination refers to the process or result of linking linguistic units so that they h
20、ave different syntactic status, one being dependent upon the other, and usually a constituent of the other. The subordinate constituents are words which modify the head. Consequently, they can be called modifiers. two dogs Head (My brother) can drink (wine). Head Swimming in the lake (is fun). Head
21、(The pepper was) hot beyond endurance. Head3) Subordinate clauses Clauses can be used as subordinate constituents. There are three basic types of subordinate clauses: complement clauses adjunct (or adverbial) clauses relative clauses John believes that the airplane was invented by an Irishman. (comp
22、lement clause) Elizabeth opened her presents before John finished his dinner. (adverbial clause) The woman that I love is moving to the south. (relative clause) 4.3. Syntactic Function The syntactic function shows the relationship between a linguistic form and other parts of the linguistic pattern i
23、n which it is used. Names of functions are expressed in terms of subjects, objects, predicators, modifiers, complements, etc. 4.3.1 Subject In some languages, subject refers to one of the nouns in the nominative case(主格). The typical example can be found in Latin, where subject is always in nominati
24、ve case, such as pater and filius in the following examples. pater filium amat (the father loves the son) patrum filius amat (the son loves the father) In English, the subject of a sentence is often said to be the agent, or the doer of the action, while the object is the person or thing acted upon b
25、y the agent. This definition seems to work for these sentences: Mary slapped John. A dog bit Bill. but is clearly wrong in the following examples: John was bitten by a dog. John underwent major heart surgery. In order to account for the case of subject in passive voice, we have two other terms “gram
26、matical subject” (John) and “logical subject” (a dog). Another traditional definition of the subject is “what the sentence is about” (i.e., topic). Again, this seems to work for many sentences, such as Bill is a very crafty fellow. but fails in others, such as (Jack is pretty reliable, but) Bill I d
27、ont trust. As for Bill, I wouldnt take his promises very seriously. All three sentences seem to be “about” Bill; thus we could say that Bill is the topic of all three sentences. The above sentences make it clear that the topic is not always the grammatical subject. What characteristics do subjects h
28、ave?A. Word order Subject ordinarily precedes the verb in the statement: Sally collects stamps. *Collects Sally stamps.B. Pro-forms The first and third person pronouns in English appear in a special form when the pronoun is a subject, which is not used when the pronoun occurs in other positions: He
29、loves me. I love him. We threw stones at them. They threw stones at us. C. Agreement with the verb In the simple present tense, an -s is added to the verb when a third person subject is singular, but the number and person of the object or any other element in the sentence have no effect at all on th
30、e form of the verb: She angers him. They anger him. She angers them. D. Content questions If the subject is replaced by a question word (who or what), the rest of the sentence remains unchanged, as in John stole the Queens picture from the British Council. Who stole the Queens picture from the Briti
31、sh council? What would John steal, if he had the chance? What did John steal from the British Council? Where did John steal the Queens picture from?E. Tag question A tag question is used to seek confirmation of a statement. It always contains a pronoun which refers back to the subject, and never to
32、any other element in the sentence. John loves Mary, doesnt he? Mary loves John, doesnt she? *John loves Mary, doesnt she?4.3.2 Predicate Predicate refers to a major constituent of sentence structure in a binary analysis in which all obligatory constituents other than the subject were considered toge
33、ther. It usually expresses actions, processes, and states that refer to the subject. The boy is running. (process) Peter broke the glass. (action) Jane must be mad! (state) The word predicator is suggested for verb or verbs included in a predicate.4.3.3 Object Object is also a term hard to define. S
34、ince, traditionally, subject can be defined as the doer of the action, object may refer to the “receiver” or “goal” of an action, and it is further classified into Direct Object and Indirect Object. Mother bought a doll. Mother gave my sister a doll. IO DO In some inflecting languages, object is mar
35、ked by case labels: the accusative case (受格) for direct object, and the dative case (与格)for indirect object. In English, “object” is recognized by tracing its relation to word order (after the verb and preposition) and by inflections (of pronouns). Mother gave a doll to my sister. John kicked me. Mo
36、dern linguists suggest that object refers to such an item that it can become subject in a passive transformation. John broke the glass. The glass was broken by John. Peter saw Jane. Jane was seen by Peter. Although there are nominal phrases in the following, they are by no means objects because they
37、 cannot be transformed into passive voice. He died last week. The match lasted three hours. He changed trains at Manchester. (*Trains were changed by him at Manchester.)4.4. Category The term category refers to the defining properties of these general units: Categories of the noun: number, gender, c
38、ase and countability Categories of the verb: tense, aspect, voice4.4.1 Number Number is a grammatical category used for the analysis of word classes displaying such contrasts as singular, dual, plural, etc. In English, number is mainly observed in nouns, and there are only two forms: singular and pl
39、ural, such as dog: dogs. Number is also reflected in the inflections of pronouns and verbs, such as He laughs: They laugh, this man: these men. In other languages, for example, French, the manifestation of number can also be found in adjectives and articles. le cheval royal (the royal horse) les che
40、vaux royaux (the royal horses)4.4.2 Gender Such contrasts as “masculine : feminine : neuter”, “animate : inanimate”, etc. for the analysis of word classes. Though there is a correlation between natural gender and grammatical gender, the assignment may seem quite arbitrary in many cases. For instance
41、, in Latin, ignis fire is masculine, while flamma flame is feminine. English gender contrast can only be observed in pronouns and a small number of nouns, and, they are mainly of the natural gender type. he: she: it prince: princess author: authoress In French, gender is manifested also both in adje
42、ctives and articles. beau cadeau (fine gift) belle maison (fine house) Le cadeau est beau. (The gift is good.) La maison est belle. (The house is beautiful.) Sometimes gender changes the lexical meaning as well, for example, in French: le poele (the stove) la poele (the frying pan) le pendule (the p
43、endulum) la pendule (the clock)4.4.3 Case The case category is used in the analysis of word classes to identify the syntactic relationship between words in a sentence. In Latin grammar, cases are based on variations in the morphological forms of the word, and are given the terms “accusative”, “nomin
44、ative”, “dative”, etc. There are five cases in ancient Greek and eight in Sanskrit. Finnish has as many as fifteen formally distinct cases in nouns, each with its own syntactic function. In English, case is a special form of the noun which frequently corresponds to a combination of preposition and n
45、oun, and it is realized in three channels: inflection following a preposition word order as manifested in teacher : teachers with : to a man John kicked Peter : Peter kicked John4.4.4 Agreement Agreement (or concord) may be defined as the requirement that the forms of two or more words of specific w
46、ord classes that stand in specific syntactic relationship with one another shall also, be characterized by the same paradigmatically marked category (or categories). This syntactic relationship may be anaphoric (照应), as when a pronoun agrees with its antecedent, Whose is this pen? -Oh, its the one I lost. or it may involve a relation b