Transformative Generative Grammar
Transformative Generative Grammar
RULES: TG is rule based grammar. Generative rules share some characteristics of both
prescriptive and descriptive rules. They are in the first place instructions like the
prescriptive rules but instead of being instructions for the production of correct speech,
they are instructions for generating all the possible sentences of the language. In the
second place, like descriptive rules, they relate to the facts of actual languages not the
invented languages of grammarians, and are ultimately based, therefore upon what
people say rather than what they ought to say.
The rules of TG are rewrite rules. That is to say, they rewrite one symbol as
another or as several others or one set of symbols by another until eventually the
sentences of the language are generated. The rules start with symbols `S' (sentence) and
then a sequence of rules rewrite this symbol until a sentence is produced. Thus
A---BC
means rewrite A as BC. A simple set of rules is as follows, if we wish to generate a
sentence like `A man read the book'.
1. S---------NP + VP
2. VP---------V + NP
3. NP---------D + N
4. V--------- read
5.Det---------a, the
6. N---------man, book
If we apply the rules in sequence, we generate the following strings successively:
S
NP + VP
NP + V + NP
Det + N + V + Det + N
Det + N + read + Det + N
A man read the book.
We can indicate optional elements by the use of brackets. Thus rule 3 can be rewritten as
NP---Det (adj) + N.
We can now generate such sentences as
A tall man read the short book.
In TG phrase structure rules form the basic part of the grammar and are technically
described as the `base component'. As long as, however, we are restricted to PS rules, we
cannot generate passive sentences from active ones. Characteristically then TG must
contain not only PS rules but also T rules.
T RULES: They contain two parts. The first part of each rule is a structural analysis
specifying the class of strings to which the rule applies. The second part of the rule
specifies the `structural change'. As an example, we can take the passive transformation
SA NP - Aux - V + NP
SC X1 - X2 - X3 - X4----X4 - X2 + be + en - X3 - by + X1
Similarly we can generate sentences that involve co-ordination and sub-ordination. We
can, for example, generate Bob and John play football, from `Bob plays football' and
`John plays football' by a simple rule that combines the two sentences:
SA NP + Aux + V + NP; NP + Aux + V + NP
SC X1-X2-X3-X4-X5-X6-X7-X8---X8-X5-X2-X3-X4.
There is a further distinction between the two kinds of T-rules- obligatory and optional T-
rules. TG can generate among many other passive sentences from active ones, yet it
cannot generate even all active sentences without recourse to some transformational
rules. Some rules have to be applied in order to produce sentences at all. They are then
obligatory. On the other hand, we are not to transform an active sentence into a passive
one. The rule, then, that converts active sentences into passive ones is optional.
A good example of obligatory T rules is provided by the element which is used to
indicate the occurrence of auxiliary verbs and tense in English. If we recognize all this in
a generative grammar, the first rule that explains Aux. is
Aux.------Tense (M) aspect.
If we consider for instance `would have been taking', we find past tense, the modal, `will',
the perfect and progressive, and we shall therefore rewrite Aux. as
will + have + en + be + ing
This is a result of the fact that we have used PS rules to expand Aspects into successive
have + en and be + ing.
An important characteristics of some rules is that they must be `ordered'. That is,
one must be applied before another. We must apply them in correct order even though
another order is possible, because if we apply them in the wrong order, we shall generate
different sentences. A good example is provided by the rules for the concord of subject
and verb for the passive. We have to provide two rules, one the passive T-rule, the other
a concord rule that will introduce next to the verb a grammatical formative indicating
singular or plural according to whether the proceeding NP is singular or plural.
NP + Sing + V ----NP + Sing + V + Sing
But this rule must not be applied before the passive transformation. If we want to
generate ` The men are mocked by the boy', our PS rule will generate a terminal string:
The + boy + sing + mock + the + men + pl.
If we now apply the concord rule, we shall introduce -ing to the verb and this will remain
when we apply the passive transformation. Our generated sentence then will be:
The man is mocked by the boy.
If, on the other hand, we apply the concord rule the passive transformation, the passive
verb will agree with the NP that precedes it, the `subject' of the passive not of the active
verb.
Since there is no `God given' definition of the distinction between PS and T rules,
the ultimate criterion must depend on what we want them to do.
GRAMMAR: The grammar of a language should describe the linguistic facts of the
language economically and accurately. From this perspective we find traditional
grammar to be deficient. The western grammarians inherited the basic postulates of
Greek tradition and interpreted language through categories of logic. This conceptual
interpretation is notional and fails to give a scientific interpretation. Moreover, the
traditional grammars distinguish written language and oral language, the formal being the
basis of grammatical study for them. But modern linguists have proved that it is speech
which is the real language and written language only a representation of it. Therefore no
wonder many forms which grammarians declared to be incorrect and unacceptable exist
in everyday speech. The traditional grammar notional and prescriptive approach towards
language is ephemeral and fails to go into the deeper problems involved.
The point that traditional grammar overlooks is the inherent system, the inner
mechanism or what Saussure calls `Langue' at work when an utterance is made. An
individual can utter a sentence and this sentence can have unpredictable possibilities of
variations. The grammar's role is not to prescribe rules for the correctness of the sentence
but to find out the system at work which enables the individual to manipulate such a great
and complex range of utterances.
Chomsky rightly asserted that traditional grammars are deficient in that they leave
unexposed many of the basic regularities of the language. They emphasize exceptions
and irregularities but only give examples and hints concerning regular and productive
syntactic process due to their preoccupation with the extra linguistic view of `natural
order of thought' being reflected in the order of words. The rules of sentence formations
as formulated by them do not belong to the field of grammar.
Deep structure is the aspect of syntactic structure operated on by semantics for the
purpose of semantic interpretation. Surface structure is the aspect of syntactic structure
operated on by phonology for the purpose of phonetic interpretation. The surface
structure is more immediately obvious and the deep structure takes into consideration the
transformation. TG accentuates that the structures relevant for semantic interpretation
turn out to be different from those which are relevant for phonological interpretation.
The following example is a simple model of how TG operates.
The boy killed the dog.
This sentence is generated by the following PS rules:
1. S----NP + Pred.
2. NP----Det + N
3. Pred.----Aux + VP
4. Aux.----Tense (past)
5. VP----V + NP
dog +[noun]
+[countable] +[animal]
the +[det]
NP Pred.
Det N AuxVP
T V NP
Past Det N
The boy killed the dog
These rules do not only give the string but also exclude the possibility of generating the
ungrammatical sentences.
*The dog boy the killed.
This example makes it apparent that there is an analogy between the human mind and
computer. As the computer decides the relevant information and gives the result,
similarly the human mind has the capacity to understand the code of each and every
lexical item and put them into syntactic structure by following the rules of language.
Moreover, it has the unique capacity of avoiding errors by automatic checking and has
infinite creativity in sentence formation.
`Flying planes can be dangerous' - has two senses:
(a) The action of flying planes can be dangerous.
(b) Planes which fly can be dangerous.
This ambiguity cannot be resolved by a traditional grammar approach as it would focus
on the surface- the word order. But the problem lies in the deep structure. Therefore,
only TG can account for the ambiguity. The difference between (a) and (b) can be
explained by showing the difference in matrix and the constituents. (a) is the result of the
following kernel sentences:
(i)------can be dangerous.
(ii)------someone flies planes.
(ii) is transformed into flying planes inserted in the place of NP. (b) has the following
kernel sentences:
(i)planes can be dangerous.
(ii)planes fly.
Applying relative transformation we get the string
Planes which fly can be dangerous.
`Which fly' is again transformed into flying and then placed before planes. Thus we find
that the deep structures of two sentences which were identical on the surface are quite
different on the deep level. Therefore to examine and explain ambiguity, TG approach is
always preferable to the traditional rules.
In this sense TG is also significant from the perspective of searching the
grammatical universals which would reveal the mystery of language and perhaps make it
possible to be fed into computers to give desired sentences varied for pedagogic and
other purposes.