Morphology Syntax
Morphology Syntax
Traditionally, grammar can be divided into two different areas of study but still interrelated each other. They are morphology and syntax. Morphology is the study of how words are
formed out of smaller units (called morphemes), while syntax is the study of the way in which
phrases and sentences are structured out of words.
UNIVERSAL GRAMMAR
In traditional grammar, the syntax of a language is described in terms of taxonomy or
classificatory list of range of different types of syntactic structures in the language. In
traditional grammar there is a central assumption underpinning syntactic analysis. The central
assumption underpinning syntactic analysis is that phrases and sentences are built up of series
of constituents (syntactic units) with each of which belong to a specific grammatical category
and serves a specific grammatical function. From this assumption, the task of linguist
analyzing the syntactic structure of any given type of sentence is to identify each of the
constituents in the sentence, to say what category it belongs to, and what function it serves.
Example
Students protested vehemently
Specific grammatical category
human I-language (i.e. a grammar which correctly describes how to form and interpret
expressions in the relevant language). The second is explanation. It means that a theory should
explain why grammars have the properties they do is conventionally referred to as the criterion
of explanatory adequacy. The third condition which we have to impose in our theory of
language is that it be maximally constrained. A theory which is constrained in appropriate ways
should enable us to provide a principled explanation for why certain types of syntactic structure
and syntactic operation simply arent found in natural languages. One way of constraining
grammars is to suppose that grammatical operations obey certain linguistic principles, and that
any operation which violates the relevant principles leads to ungrammatically.
One of the principles of Universal Grammar incorporated into the language faculty is a locality
principle which can be outlined informally as : grammatical operations are local. The similar
locality condition of grammatical operations includes agreement and case assignment.
PARAMETERS
The language faculty incorporates a set of universal principles which guide the child in
acquiring a grammar. There are universal principles which determine the broad outlines of the
grammar of natural languages, there also seem to be language-particular aspects of grammar
which children have to learn as part of the task of acquiring their native language. Language
acquisition involves not only lexical learning but also some gramatical learning
gramatical learning : language acquisition
lexical learning : learning the lexical system/words in the language and their
idiosyncratic linguistic properties)
gramatical learning will be limited to the parameters (dimension or aspects) or
parametrised aspects of grammar (those aspects of grammar which are subject to parametric
variation from one to another language). parametric variation found in the grammars of different
(adult) natural languages.
In English, finite verbs can generally have only overt subjects, not null subjects.
Different to some other languages e.g Italian which is a null-subject language, English is nonnull-subject language. It is called as parametric variation, that the relevant parameter (termed
the Null-Subject Parameter) would appear to be a binary one.
complements
PARAMETER SETTING
The theory of parameters outlined has important implications for a theory of language
acquisition. The innate of Language Faculty incorporates a set of universal grammatical
principles, and a set of grammatical parameters which impose severe constraints on the range of
grammatical variation permitted in natural languages. This theory is known as Principles and
Parameters Theory/ PPT.
The PPT model has important implication for the nature of the language acquisition
process. PPT hypothesizes that grammatical properties which are universal will not have to be
learned by the child.
This simplified parameters setting model of the acquisition of grammar has given rise to
a metaphorical acquisition model in which the child is visualized as having to set a series of
switches in one of two positions, each such switch representing different parameters.
This assumption that acquisition the grammar of a language involve the relatively simple
task of setting a number of grammatical parameters provides a natural way of accounting for the
fact that the acquisition of specific parameters appear to be a remarkably rapid and error free
process in young children. Thus, the earliest verb phrase and prepositional phrases produce by
young children acquiring English consistently show verb and prepositions position before their
complements, as structure such as the following indicate.
ADDITIONAL NOTE
Grammar
The term grammar is used in a number of different senses Jacob (1995). Here it is of
interest to distinguish three senses, or three kinds of grammar. Those are mental grammar,
descriptive grammar and prescriptive grammar.
Mental grammar is the term grammar that used to refer to the rules and principles native
speakers use in producing and understanding their language.
Descriptive grammar is the term grammar that also used to refer to the set of
generalization formulated by grammarians, who examine grammatical expression, perhaps
compare them with other logically possible strings of words, and then try to determine the
properties that differentiate the well-formed strings of words.
Prescriptive grammar is the term grammar refers to certain kinds of language rules not
necessarily based on usage by the ordinary native speaker but on the kinds of English believed
characteristic of the most educated speakers of the language.