WEEK 10 Analysing Sentences - An Introduction To English Syntax
WEEK 10 Analysing Sentences - An Introduction To English Syntax
In the light of what you’ve read so far in this chapter about (a) pre-
determiners, (b) determiners, (c) adjectival modifiers, and (d) noun modifiers,
draw the phrase marker for the NP in [33]. Discussion 4, page 158.
[33] all those dusty gorilla suits
Before deciding how [35] should be represented, give the phrase marker
for [34].
The phrase marker for [34] will be the same as that for the sad clowns – [4] at the
beginning of the chapter. So [red car] is a NOM in [34]. Now, there’s no reason
to suppose that it is not a NOM in [35] as well. On that assumption, new must
be modifying the NOM [red car]. You now have all the information needed to
draw the phrase marker for [35].
The important thing to notice here is that, for [35], we need two NOMs. This
follows from the comments of the preceding paragraph. So [36] is the phrase
marker for [35].
[36] NP
DET NOM
ART AP NOM
a A AP N
new A car
red
What this shows is that NOM is a recursive category. In other words, NOM
can have NOM as an immediate constituent. In fact, apart from noun modi-
fiers, every modifier must be immediately dominated by a NOM. In the
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
light of this, give the phrase markers for the following NPs. Discussion 5,
pages 158–9.
[37] some large greasy uneaten fritters
[38] those two very charming atomic scientists
Post-modifiers
In this section I look at just two of the categories that follow the head noun
within NOM: Prepositional Phrases and certain types of Adjective Phrase.
■ Prepositional Phrases
In the NP an expedition to the pub, the head N is expedition and it is modified
by the PP to the pub, which consists of P + NP. In this case, we have a post-
modifying (PP) sister to the noun, within NOM. So:
[39a] NP
DET NOM
ART N PP
an expedition P NP
to DET NOM
ART N
the pub
Now, just as expedition can be modified by a PP, so can pub. For example: (an
expedition to) the pub in the village. The phrase marker for this is going to start
off exactly like [39a] – but the bold italicised NOM in [39a] will now branch, as
in [39b]:
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POST-MODIFIERS
[39b]
NOM
N PP
pub P NP
in DET NOM
ART N
the village
As my dotted line shows, this could go on indefinitely – for example,
[40] an expedition to the pub in the village at the foot of that mountain
This might seem complicated but it’s really very simple. It’s the same story again
and again. Were you to draw the phrase marker for [40] and look at the right-hand
nodes, you’d find it goes NP – NOM – PP again and again (four times, in fact).
All those NPs have a regular right-branching structure (see [39a–b]).
Now, at first glance, [41] might seem to have the same structure.
[41] an expedition to the pub for more cherry brandy
Not so. I hope you agree that, unlike the pub in the village in [39a–b], the pub for
more cherry brandy is not a constituent of [41]. For more cherry brandy is not
modifying pub. So what is it modifying? Consult your intuitions about the mean-
ing of [41] and in the light of that suggest an appropriate analysis for it. Use a
triangle for each of the PPs. Hint: remember that NOM is a recursive category.
You’ve got it, I’m sure. For more cherry brandy modifies a constituent that has
expedition as its head – it’s an expedition ( . . . ) for more cherry brandy. So, it
must be modifying expedition to the pub. Now, expedition to the pub is a NOM.
And expedition to the pub for more cherry brandy is a NOM as well. So we have a
NOM within a NOM – as in [42]:
[42] NP
DET NOM
ART NOM PP
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
All the NPs considered so far have included just pre-modifiers or just post-
modifiers. What happens when NOM includes both a pre-modifying AP and a
post-modifying PP? Remember, there must be as many NOMs as there are
modifiers. There are two possibilities, then:
[A] NP [B] NP
NOM PP AP NOM
AP N N PP
With some NPs, it doesn’t matter much which analysis we give (I give
examples later). For others it does matter, and deciding which analysis is
appropriate involves attending to the meaning in each case. In each of the
following, it matters. Try to decide which analysis – A or B – is appropriate in
each case.
[47] that nuclear scientist from Germany.
[48] the famous writer of detective stories.
[49] an anxious applicant for the job.
[50] structural engineers in disgrace.
[51] the personal assistant in the hat.
[52] their secret visits to the kitchen.
[53] Larry’s neat summary of the argument.
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POST-MODIFIERS
In the sentence, the argument is the direct object of the verb summarised. As
a complement, it combines with summarised (V) to form a VP – and that VP is
modified by neatly. Now, it’s reasonable to expect the structural configuration
of the NP to parallel that of the sentence. After all, [53a] is simply sentence [54a]
recast as an NP:
[53b] NP
DET NOM2
Larrys AP NOMI
neat N PP
[54b] S
NP VP2
neatly V NP
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
Only the categories have changed. Notice that the NOMs in the NP match the
VPs in the S. The same goes for the NPs in [48], [49], and [52]. The Appendix
to this chapter discusses a refinement suggested by this parallelism between
S and NP.
Now compare the NPs in [47]–[53] above – in each of which the choice
between analyses [A] and [B] clearly matters – with the following NPs:
[55] The unknown scientist from Germany.
[56] The new railings in the park.
[57] That tall student in the hat.
With these, either analysis is possible. The topmost NOM in [55], for example,
could be analysed either as [A] [[unknown scientist] [from Germany]] or [B]
[[unknown] [scientist from Germany]]. So which should we choose? Well,
the analysis that associates the more permanent and/or intrinsic property
more closely with the head noun will generally seem more natural. Thus the
[B] analysis seems more natural for [55], since being from Germany is more
permanent/intrinsic than being unknown.
The NP in [58] includes three modifiers:
[58] that tall student of maths in the hat.
Bearing in mind that there will be as many NOMs as there are modifiers, and
that student of maths corresponds to the VP constituent [studies maths], give a
complete phrase marker for that NP (i.e. using no triangles). Discussion 7,
page 159.
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MODIFICATION OF PRONOUNS
DET NOM
ART N AP
the chef A PP
There’s a reason why such APs must post-modify the Noun. Call it ‘The
Friendly Head Principle’ (FHP): within NOM, the head of a modifying phrase
wants to be as close as possible to the head noun. In [65a], the head of the AP
(responsible) is right next to the head of the NP (chef ). By contrast, in pre-
modifying position, in *[65b], the head of the AP is separated from the noun by
the AP’s own complement. Notice that the FHP explains why PPs of the form
P+NP always post-modify the head noun (since the head (P) will then sit next
to the head N). It also explains why, when a modifying AP includes – or even
could include – (pre-)modification by DEG, it pre-modifies the head noun.
Compare [68] and [69a–b]:
[68] the very responsible men
[69] a. *the chef very responsible
b. *the chef very responsible for the sauces.
Modification of pronouns
I’ve said that pronouns replace full NPs. It is rather awkward, therefore, to find
pronouns combining with an AP [70a–b] or PP [71a–b] within the structure of
an NP.
[70a] something wonderful. [70b] anyone intelligent.
[71a] someone in the crowd. [71b] no-one/none from the bank.
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
pronoun AP pronoun PP
However, if (big ‘if ’) they are pronouns, notice they are also determiners
([73a–b]) or pre-determiners ([74]). In fact, genuine pronouns, which cannot
also function as determiners or pre-determiners, cannot be post-modified: *they
from the factory, *he of the men.
It’s arguable, then, that the ‘pronouns’ in [73]–[74] are not pronouns at all,
but are what they always were: determiners or pre-determiners. They only
appear to have changed into pronouns – and thus be functioning as the head of
their NP because the real head of the NP has been ellipted. This suggests that
[73a], for example, should be analysed as in [75], in which animals is the ellipted
head:
[75] NP
DET NOM
Q N PP
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MODIFICATION OF PRONOUNS
There are facets of NP structure that this chapter hasn’t covered. Some are dealt
with in the chapters that follow. Furthermore, several problems have been
skated over. You can get an idea of what these are by looking closely at NPs in
any piece of writing and seeing to what extent the analyses proposed here can
handle them. A refinement to the analysis, which you and/or your tutor may
want to incorporate, is discussed in the Appendix to this chapter.
DET NOM
POSS N
NP s behaviour
DET NOM
POSS N
NP "s brother
name
Hieronimo
2. NP
PRE-DET NP
all pronoun
mine
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
3. NP
DET NOM
ART PartP N
Adv congealing
rapidly
4. NP
PRE-DET NP
DEM AP N
those A N N
5. NP
DET NOM
Q AP NOM
some A AP NOM
large A AP N
greasy A fritters
uneaten
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MODIFICATION OF PRONOUNS
NP
DET NOM
DEM AP NOM
those QA AP NOM
two DEG A AP N
atomic
7. Of maths relates most closely to the head N student. And tall denotes a more
permanent property than in a hat. So:
NP
DET NOM3
DEM NOM2 PP
that AP NOMI P NP
A N PP in DET NOM
maths
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
8. NP
DET NOM
ART AP NOM
the QA N PP
two E P NP
in DET NOM
ART N
the dungeons
Exercises
1. Draw complete phrase markers for the following NPs. ‘Complete’ means not
using any triangles. Several of them involve empty DET (some more than once).
(c) is ambiguous and should be assigned two phrase markers. (f) contains a co-
ordination. Remember that the mother and the two sisters of the co-ordinator
and must be of the same category. Before attempting (f), ask yourself whether it’s
a co-ordination at the lexical (N), intermediate (NOM), or phrasal (NP) level.
(a) Experts at syntax.
(b) Those ten paintings of his garden by Monet.
(c) More ferocious curries.
(d) The dying king’s final message.
(e) All Gulbenkian’s contributions to charity.
(f ) Some rather off-putting gestures and remarks.
2. On page 146, few was categorised as a quantifying adjective (QA), so the few
students would be analysed as in (a):
(a) NP (b) NP
ART AP N a few N
However, analysis (a) is not appropriate for a few students. For this, I propose
analysis (b), in which a few is represented as a constituent. Explain what’s wrong
with analysing a few students as in (a). A similar issue arises with the NP a little
butter. A few and a little are special – highly irregular – determiners.
■ Discussion of exercises
1. (a) NP
DET NOM
N PP
experts P NP
at DET NOM
syntax
(b) NP
DET NOM
DEM AP NOM
those QA NOM PP
ten N PP P NP
paintings P NP by name
POSS N
his garden
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
AP NOM AP N
QA AP N DEG A curries
ferocious
(d) NP
DET NOM
POSS AP N
NP 's A message
ART PartP N
dying
(e) NP
PRE-DET NP
POSS N PP
NP 's contributions P NP
Culbenkian N
charity
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FURTHER EXERCISES
(f ) NP
DET NOM
Q AP N
2. The head of the NP a few students is plural, so the whole NP is plural and can’t
have the (singular) determiner a, the indefinite article. Similarly, butter is a mass
noun and mass nouns can’t be determined by the indefinite article. The whole NP
a little butter is mass, not count.
Further exercises
1. Draw complete phrase markers for the following NPs.
Set I
(a) Melancholy thoughts.
(b) Some very clever chess moves.
(c) The boat’s sudden move to the left.
(d) The word on the tip of my tongue.
(e) An invitation to the palace from the Queen.
(f ) All performers absent from the rehearsal.
(g) Two of those city plans.
Set II
(a) Coffee and oranges. (See also Rhythm and blues.)
(Not ambiguous, but three analyses are possible. If you give only one of
these, save ink and give the simplest.)
(b) Three stars visible to the naked eye.
(c) The king of England’s short and turbulent reign.
(d) These smartly-dressed men and women. (ambiguous)
(e) Both the man’s eyes.
(f ) Both the men’s behaviour.
((e) and ( f ) need care. (e) means ‘both eyes of the man’, not *‘the eyes of
both the man’. ( f ) means ‘the behaviour of both the men’, not *‘both the
behaviour of the men’.)
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
Set III
(a) The few remaining pieces of kitchen furniture.
(b) Anyone capable of rational thought or reasonably sensitive.
(c) Some of those people at the back.
(d) These two coins and the three in the pocket of your coat.
(e) Three tall passengers angry about the altered height of the bulkheads.
(f ) Many of the more successful chess players.
In Chapter 5, we saw that in sentences like [2] there are two VPs, one within
the other: VP1 [summarised the argument] and VP2 [neatly summarised the argu-
ment]. I gave evidence for this, involving the expression do so. Do so replaces
VPs and only VPs (not Vs, for example).
[3] Larry summarised the argument neatly and Bill did so too.
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APPENDIX: NOM AND THE PRO-FORM ONE
It is the ungrammaticality of [5] that shows that did so can’t replace just the V
summarised:
[5] *Larry summarised the argument and Bill did so the conclusion.
In the text I drew attention to the parallelism between VP and NOM. For
every VP in the S there’s a corresponding NOM in the NP. Since do so provides
a test for VP, you might ask whether there’s a corresponding test for NOM in
NP. There is. It involves the pronoun one. In fact one(s) should really be called
a pro-NOM, since it only ever replaces the intermediate category NOM (never a
full NP and never just N). Look:
[6] Larry’s neat summary of the argument and [this one], too.
(one = NOM2: neat summary of the argument)
[7] Larry’s neat summary of the argument and [Bill’s clumsy one].
(one = NOM1: summary of the argument)
[8] *Larry’s summary of the argument and [Bill’s one of the conclusion].
(!*one = N: summary)
Just as do so cannot replace just the V summarised but only a VP, so one cannot
replace just the N summary but only a NOM.
So, one provides a test for whether we have a NOM or not. Feel free to check
the NOMs in any of the examples in the text of the chapter. You will find that
wherever there is a NOM, that sequence of words can be replaced by one(s). So,
if everything’s going so swimmingly, why is a refinement needed?
Well, take for example one of the first NPs considered in this chapter, the sad
clowns and the phrase marker I gave for it [4] on page 141. That phrase marker
only contains one NOM [sad clowns]. If that’s correct, the one test for NOMs
suggests that we should only be able to replace [sad clowns] by ones. Well, we
can indeed do that:
[9] Bill hired those sad clowns and you hired these ones.
(ones = sad clowns)
Before reading further, think carefully about why this is a problem for the
analysis proposed in [4] in the text. How should we alter that analysis to make
it consistent with the acceptability of [10]?
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
In [10], ones can’t be understood as replacing the NOM [sad clowns]. If it were,
[10] would be demanding that some happy sad clowns be hired. But that’s not
what [10] means. [10] implies a contrast between happy ones and sad ones. So,
in [10] ones is replacing just clowns. In phrase marker [4], though, clowns
by itself is just a simple N, not a NOM. But we’ve seen that one(s) can’t replace
just simple nouns. If one(s) could replace a simple noun, [8] would have been
grammatical. This suggests that phrase marker [4] is wrong. Certainly, clowns is
a noun but – because it is replaceable by ones – it must also be a NOM as well as
an N. So the phrase marker must look like [11], with an extra NOM (in bold)
dominating N.
[11] NP
DET NOM
ART AP NOM
the bold N
clowns
An important contrast has emerged. This is the contrast between the NOM
sad clowns in [11] – which contains an extra, non-branching, NOM node – and
the NOM summary of the argument in [1] – which branches. In other words,
in those two examples, clowns is, in its own right, a NOM as well as an N, but
summary is just an N, not a NOM in its own right.
How can you tell when the extra NOM node is required? Well, you can test
for it by replacement by one. However, while that will help you to get things
right, it doesn’t in itself explain the nature of the contrast. What you really need
to know is why one can replace just clowns in sad clowns but not just summary
in summary of the argument.
The answer lies in the different ways in which sad and of the argument relate
to their respective head nouns. It comes down to this: sad is a sister of NOM,
whereas of the argument is a sister of N. Put this way, this should remind you of
the distinction, within VP, between sister of VP (adjunct) and sister of V
(complement). The point is that, within the NP, the PP of the argument relates
to the head N summary in exactly the same way as, within the VP, the direct
object NP the argument relates to the V summarise. They are both functioning as
complements of the head, whether that head is an N or a V. By contrast, there’s
no intuitive reason to suppose that sad relates to the head N clowns as a comple-
ment does to a V. This intuition is borne out by the fact that the sad ones is
grammatical, indicating that sad is not modifying an N, but a NOM. Sad relates
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APPENDIX: NOM AND THE PRO-FORM ONE
to clowns (NOM) in exactly the same way that neat relates to summary (of the
argument); and this, essentially, is how adjuncts relate to the VP (summarise
the argument).
In sum, the distinction between sister-of-V and sister-of-VP – which is the dis-
tinction between complement and adjunct – is paralleled in NP by the distinction
between sister-of-N and sister-of-NOM. So, a sister-of-N in an NP functions as
a complement in the NP and a sister-of-NOM functions as an adjunct in NP.
As another example, consider [48] in the chapter, repeated as [12a]:
[13a] those students of maths in hats. [13b] *those students in hats of maths.
The explanation is that of maths relates to the N student in the same way as maths
relates to the verb studies in the VP studies maths. It’s an N-complement – and
thus sister-of-N. Inevitably, a sister-of-N must appear immediately adjacent to
N, as in [13a]. [13b] is ungrammatical because of maths is in a position in which
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
it could only be the sister of the NOM students in hats. In hats, on the other hand,
is an adjunct and thus sister-of-NOM, so it tolerates being separated from the
head noun.
Consider now:
[14] a painter with real talent from Germany.
[15] a painter from Germany with real talent.
What conclusion can be drawn from the acceptability of both these orders, in
the light of what was said about order in [13a] and [13b]?
Since from Germany can modify painter with real talent, as in [14], it must be
a sister-of-NOM (an adjunct). Now, painter with real talent could consist of
N + PP or NOM + PP. But which? Put another way, is with real talent a comple-
ment or an adjunct? The fact that it can be separated from the head N – as in
[15], where it’s modifying painter from Germany (a NOM) – indicates that it
too is a sister-of-NOM (an adjunct). So with real talent and from Germany are
both adjuncts (sisters of NOM) and this explains why they can occur in either
order. Consistent with this, notice that, in both [14] and [15], one can replace
just painter.
In the light of the analysis proposed in this Appendix, draw the phrase
markers for the following. They are given as Answers to Appendix Exercise at
the end of this Appendix.
[16] those observations by Newton.
[17] Larry’s neat summary.
[18] Larry’s summary of the argument.
By contrast with the one from Poland, which is definite, [19a] and [20a] are
indefinite. This suggests that one can be determined by empty DET.
[19b] NP [20b] NP
NOM PP one
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APPENDIX: NOM AND THE PRO-FORM ONE
Notice that, in this one case, NOM does not dominate N, but dominates one
directly. One must be immediately dominated by NOM and not by N, because
it is a pro-NOM, not a pro-N (not a pronoun).
DET NOM
DEM NOM PP
those N P NP
observations by Newton
[17] NP
DET NOM
POSS AP NOM
Larry's neat N
summary
[18] NP
DET NOM
POSS N PP
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CHAPTER 7 THE STRUCTURE OF NOUN PHRASES
170
Sentences within
8 sentences
You are now familiar with the idea that a constituent can contain constituents
of the same category as itself. For example, an NP may contain further NPs,
a NOM may contain further NOMs, a VP further VPs, and so on. This is called
recursion. This and the next two chapters are concerned with the description of
sentences that contain sentences as constituents – in other words, with senten-
tial recursion.
You shouldn’t have much difficulty picking out, within the structure of the
following sentence, a sequence that can itself be analysed as a sentence.
[1a] Georgette said she burned the fritters.
The verb say is transitive and its direct object is [she burned the fritters], which is
itself analysable as a sentence. Here’s an initial phrase marker for [1a] (I modify
it slightly below):
[1b] SI
NP VP
Georgette V S2
[trans]
[past] NP VP
said she V NP
[trans]
[past] the fritters
burned
[1b] is a complex sentence: it contains a sentential structure as a constituent
(marked off by the dotted line). Contrast [1a] with the co-ordinate, compound
sentence [2]:
[2] He hired the acrobats and you hired the clowns.
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CHAPTER 8 SENTENCES WITHIN SENTENCES
The two sentential structures in [2] are independent of each other. Neither is a
constituent of the other. They are at the same level in the structure of [2]. That’s
why they are described as co-ordinate – with the emphasis on ‘co’.
You can see that the two sentential structures in [1a / b] are not at the same
level of structure. S2 is part of the structure of S1. Stripped down to essentials,
S1 = [Georgette said S2]. So, S2 is said to be subordinate to S1, with the
emphasis on ‘sub’. It’s lower in the structure. And S1 itself is superordinate
to S2 – emphasis on ‘super’. It’s higher than and includes S2.
Subordinate sentential structures are traditionally called subordinate
clauses (less traditionally, ‘embedded sentences’). So this chapter is all about
subordinate clauses, and how they relate to their superordinate clauses.
Now look at [3], which contains two subordinate clauses:
[3] I thought Georgette said she burned the fritters.
I thought S2
Georgette said S3
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CHAPTER 8 SENTENCES WITHIN SENTENCES
Within the structure of [5], [7] can be identified as a subordinate clause, and
within the structure of [6], [8a], and [8b] can.
[7] He was in command.
[8a] You received no greeting from Mars. [8b] It is uninhabited.
Reminded is the main verb of [5] and mean is the main verb of [6].
It’s important to note that, in [5], at every opportunity has its function in
respect of the main verb reminded. At every opportunity, then, belongs in the
main clause: He reminded the men . . . at every opportunity. It can’t be part of the
subordinate clause, since he was in command at every opportunity is clearly not
part of the meaning of [5].
The abbreviated clausal analysis of [5], then, will be:
[9a] SI
he was in command
[9b] S1[He reminded the men that S2[he was in command] at every
opportunity]
As you can see from [9a], [5] is not right-branching. Now try an abbreviated
clausal analysis of [6] above.
You may remember the subject–predicate analysis of this sentence from Chapter 2,
Exercise 1(f): subject [the fact that you received no greeting from Mars], predicate
[doesn’t mean that it is uninhabited]. The first subordinate clause, [8a], falls wholly
within the main clause subject, while the second, [8b], falls wholly within the main
clause predicate. So, although [6], like [3], contains two subordinate clauses, it
differs from [3] in that each subordinate clause is subordinated directly to the
main clause; neither is subordinate to the other subordinate clause. As the follow-
ing analysis shows, [6] is not a regularly right-branching structure either.
173