Lecture 3a Clause functions Adapted from Mary Laughren.

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Lecture 3a Clause functions Adapted from Mary Laughren

Transcript of Lecture 3a Clause functions Adapted from Mary Laughren.

Page 1: Lecture 3a Clause functions Adapted from Mary Laughren.

Lecture 3aClause functions

Adapted from Mary Laughren

Page 2: Lecture 3a Clause functions Adapted from Mary Laughren.

Sentences and Clauses

Page 3: Lecture 3a Clause functions Adapted from Mary Laughren.

Phrase structure rules

(1) S NP VP

(2) NP (Detv) (AdjP)* N

(3) AdjP (AdvP) Adj

(4) VP V (NP) (NP) (PP)*

(5) PP P (NP/PP)

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Complex SentenceS

NPVP

V

CP

COMP (SUB)

S

I know that the tall librarian put the book on that shelf

Upper S = sentence

Lower S = clause

Page 5: Lecture 3a Clause functions Adapted from Mary Laughren.

Complex Sentence

S SConj

S

The tall librarian put the book on AND the short one removed it

the shelf

Upper S corresponds to a sentence

Lower S corresponds to a clause

Page 6: Lecture 3a Clause functions Adapted from Mary Laughren.

The status of VP in English

S NP + VP (as in (1))

VP V (NP) (NP) (PP)* (as in (4))

Tests for phrasehood of VP:• Substitution • Clefting • Movement

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(8)a. The tall librarian put the book on the shelf, and so did John.

The tall librarian put the book on the shelf, and John did so too.

b. *It was put that book on the shelf that the tall librarian _____.

c. (I told the tall librarian to put that book on the shelf, and)

*put that book on the shelf the tall librarian ___.

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(9)a. (I told the tall librarian to put that book on the shelf, and) put that book on the shelf

the tall librarian did ___.

b. ... the tall librarian did put that book on the shelf.

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(10)a. (She denies that) she puts all the linguistics books in the bin, but

put them in the bin she does.

b. *puts them in the bin she ___.

c. She does put all the linguistics books in the bin.

d. * She does puts all the linguistics books in the bin.

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(11)a. The bowler took a great catch.

b. *Took a great catch the bowler ___.

c. (...and) take a great catch the bowler did ___.

d. The bowler did take a great catch.

e. *The bowler did took a great catch.

so

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puts/takes

does put/take

put/took

did put/take

so

so

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puts

present PUT

put

past PUT

takes

present TAKE

took

past TAKE

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Revised S

S

NP AUX VP

TENSE

The tall librarian does/did put that book on…..

---------- puts/put that book on..

The bowler does/did take a great catch

----------- takes/took a great catch

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Revised S

S

NP AUX VP

TENSE

The tall librarian does/did so (16a)

---------- *so (16b)

The bowler does/did so

----------- *so

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What about the cleft test?

(20) a. ?It was take a great catch that he did

____.

b. *It was took a great catch that he ____.

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Functions in the Clause

S NP AUX VP Subject Tense Predicate

Mary PAST cleaned her teeth.

John PRESENT eats his dinner.

The baby does drink milk

PRESENT

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Subjects

• Typically filled by NP– The baby ate the lasagne

• Can also be filled by PP– Under the bed seems the safest.

• Or by a clause– That John left surprised me

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Predicates

• Typically filled by VP– The baby does drink milk.

• Can also be filled by AdjP– The baby is extremely happy.

• Or by an NP– John is a good doctor.

• Or by a PP– John was in the house.

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Traditional definitions of Subject

• “the performer of the action”The boy bit the dog.The boy felt sick.The boy is an Australian.The boy was bitten by the dog.

• How do these sentences challenge the traditional definition that the subject is the “performer of the action”?

AGENT

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• “what the sentence is about”I bought this hat at the Ekka.No-one runs faster than Superman.It rained last night.

• How do these sentences challenge the traditional definition that the subject is “what the sentence is about”?

TOPIC

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Defining “Subject” by grammatical properties

• Test 1 - Word order–Subjects typically precede the predicate

• Test 2 - Agreement–In some circumstances the AUX/verb will change form, depending on the nature of the subject. We say the verb agrees with the subject

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Examples of subject-verb agreement

The boy was biting the dog.The boy was biting the dogs.The boys were biting the dog.The boys were biting the dogs.

• The tensed verb form changes when the preceding NP (the subject) becomes plural.

• It is unaffected by the change in number of the following NP (the object).

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More properties of Subjects

• Test 3 - Pronoun form– In English, pronouns have distinct (case)

forms for certain functions, such as subject.

– The case form used for subjects is called Nominative case.

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Examples of Case forms of English Pronouns

• Nominative (or subject) pronouns forms include: I, he, she, we.– I kissed you, he kissed you, she kissed you, we

kissed you

• These forms are in contrast with Accusative (or object) forms such as: me, him, her, us.– You kissed me, you kissed him, you kissed her,

you kissed us

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Another subject property

• Test 4 - Auxiliary raising– When an interrogative sentence is formed

from a declarative sentence, the auxiliary verb which has the tense-marking function precedes the subject phrase.

– The boy is biting the dog. (declarative)– Is the boy biting the dog? (interrogative)

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Summary

Simple sentence = single S or clauseComplex sentence > 1 S or clause

Functions of main constituents of S:• Subject: NP/PP/clause• Tense: Auxiliary verb (Lexical verb)• Predicate: VP/AdjP/NP/PP

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Summary (con't)

VP = V (minus tense-marking) + .....

– VP with untensed verb passes all three tests for phrasehood:

• Substitution (by so )• Cleft• Movement

–VP with tensed verb fails all three tests

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Further reading:

Fromkin, V. Rodman, R. et al. 2005. An Introduction to Language Ch. 4