Grammatical Functions and Case Marking
Grammatical Functions and Case Marking
CORE
ARGUMENTS
VERB
The arguments of PAS are represented
as variables such as x and y, which CORE
ARGUMENTS
will receive a particular value in each
concrete sentence. In the sentence John john ball
hit the ball, the value of x = John, and
the value of y = the ball. X y
Semantic roles
VERB
• The notion Agent refers to the entity that is
in control of the event expressed by the CORE
verb. The Patient is involved in the event, ARGUMENTS
GRAMMATICAL GRAMMATICAL
SUBJECT OBEJCT
RELATIONSHIP
VERB
CORE
ARGUMENTS
SUBJECT OBJECT
X y
GRAMMATICAL GRAMMATICAL
SUBJECT OBEJCT grammatical function frame
•There are also some verbs which requires three arguments. The third one is named as
Recipient.
•Example:
• John gave his sister a book
• Agent= John Patient= book Recipient: his sister
•Adjuncts:
• The entities involved which further specify the event.
•Example:
•John hit his enemy in the back with a stick. So here ‘in the back’ is adjunct and it is optional.
•The number of arguments a verb requires depend om its syntactic valency.
Linking rules:
They predict the relationship between the two levels of PAS
and grammatical function.
1: If there are two arguments, then the argument that expresses
the agent of the action will be expressed as a grammatical
subject and the other as a grammatical argument.
Hit, x(agent), y(patient).
2: In case of only one argument, default linking rule is applied
like for intransitive verb, it will be referred to as grammatical
subject
Word order:
The sequence of words in a sentence is governed by
grammatical function, affecting the meaning.
It indicates the particular grammatical function
performed by noun phrases.
Linguists classify languages according to word order.
like SOV, SVO, etc.
It also helps in elliptical constructions.
For example,
John hit his enemy, and (he) left. The subject of the
second clause may be omitted but is interpreted with the
word order.
Elliptical constructions
An elliptical construction is one in which a word or phrase implied by context is
omitted from a sentence, usually because it is a repetition of a preceding word or
phrase. The three principal types of elliptical construction, with the omitted text
enclosed in brackets.
Noun ellipsis: “I went swimming, and John went [swimming], too.”
Verb ellipsis: “She favors romantic comedies, and Jane [favors] musicals.”
Verb-phrase ellipsis: “He went for a walk, but they didn’t [go for a walk].”
POINTS
• GRAMMATICAL FUNCTIONS: Roles of different units playing in a clause.
• LCS
• PAS
• CORE ARGUMENTS: Agent (x) Patient(Y)
• Recipient
• ADJUNTS
• LINKING RULES
• WORD ORDER
• ELIPTICAL CONSTRUCTIONS
CASE MARKING
• Case is a system of marking dependent nouns for the type of
relationship they bear to their heads.
• Subject-verb agreement, shown in the tree on the left, is a case of head-marking
because the singular subject John requires the inflectional suffix -s to appear on
the finite verb cheats, the head of the clause.