Syntactic structures
From UNL Wiki
Syntactic structure is the configuration or the arrangement of the forms in a phrase so as to elicit its internal syntactic dependencies (such as government, agreement, etc).
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Universal Structure
The UNLarium framework follows the X-bar approach, which postulates that all human languages share the same underlying syntactic structure, whose abstract configuration is depicted in the diagram below:
XP / \ spec XB / \ XB adjt / \ X comp | head
In the above:
- X is the head, the nucleus or the source of the whole syntactic structure, which is actually derived (or projected) out of it.
- comp (i.e., complement) is an internal argument, i.e., a word, phrase or clause which is necessary to the head to complete its meaning (e.g., objects of transitive verbs)
- adjt (i.e., adjunct) is a word, phrase or clause which modifies the head but which is not syntactically required by it (adjuncts are expected to be extranuclear, i.e., removing an adjunct would leave a grammatically well-formed sentence)
- spec (i.e., specifier) is an external argument, i.e., a word, phrase or clause which qualifies (determines) the head
- XB (X-bar) is the general name for any of the intermediate projections derived from X
- XP (X-bar-bar, X-double-bar, X-phrase) is the maximal projection of X.
Representation
In the UNLarium framework, syntactic structures are represented by S-rules as follows:
XP(XB(XB(head;complement);adjunct);spec);
For simplification reasons, the same structure may be represented by five head-driven relations, as follows:
XS(head;specifier);, which describes the relation between the head of the structure and its specifier XA(head;adjunct);, which describes the relation between the head of the structure and its adjuncts XC(head;complement);, which describes the relation between the head of the structure and its complements XH(head);, which describes the head of the structure
This is to say that:
XP(XB(XB(head;complement);adjunct);spec) := XS(head;specifier)XA(head;adjunct)XC(head;complement) XS(head;specifier)XA(head;adjunct)XC(head;complement) := XP(XB(XB(head;complement);adjunct);spec)
Where X must be replaced by one of the eight possible heads (N, P, V, A, J, C, D, I).
Examples
- VH("boy"); ("boy" is the head of a noun phrase)
- DP("a"); ("a" is a determiner phrase)
- JH("beautiful"); ("beautiful" is the head of an adjective phrase)
- AP("very"); ("very" is an adverbial phrase)
- JP("very beautiful"); ("very beautiful" is an adjective phrase)
- JA("beautiful";AP("very")); (the adverbial phrase "very" is an adjunct in the adjective phrase headed by "beautiful") = very beautiful
- NS("boy";DP("a")); (the determiner phrase "a" is the specifier of a noun phrase headed by "boy")
- NA("boy";JP("very beautiful"); (the adjective phrase "very beautiful" is an adjunct in the noun phrase headed by "boy") = very beautiful boy
- NA("boy";JH("beautiful")); (the adjective phrase headed by "beautiful" is an adjunct in the noun phrase headed by "boy") = very beautiful boy
- NA("boy";JA("beautiful";AP("very")); (the adverbial phrase headed by "very" is an adjunct in the adjective phrase headed by "beautiful"; the adjective phrase headed by "beautiful" is an adjunct in the noun phrase headed by "boy") = very beautiful boy
- NP(NB("boy";JP("very beautiful");DP("a"); (the noun phrase headed by "boy" has an adjunct (the adjective phrase "very beautiful") and a specifier (the determiner phrase "a")) = a very beautiful boy
Observations
- Constituents are phrases
- Specifiers, adjuncts and complements are to be represented as complex structures, even when they are composed of a single node:
- a boy
NS("boy";"a");- NS("boy";DP("a"));
- a boy
- XH and XP are not the same
- VP("make"); = the verbal phrase is "make" (there's no other constituent in the phrase)
- VH("make"); = the head of the phrase is "make" (the phrase may contain other constituents)
- heads are to be omitted or replaced by features in general rules, such as subcategorization frames
- NS("boy",DP("a")); = the determiner phrase headed by "a" is the specifier of the noun phrase headed by "noun"
- NS(DP); = a determiner phrase is a specifier in a noun phrase
- NS(NOU;DH(ART)); = a determiner phrase headed by an article (ART) is a specifier of a noun phrase headed by a noun (NOU)
- heads and phrases may be replaced by unique indexes for simplification reasons
- indexes are to be expressed by "%<VALUE>", where <VALUE> is any alphabetic string
- NA("boy";JA("beautiful";AP("very")); (no indexes)
- NA("boy";JA%a)JA%a("beautiful";AP%b)AP%b("very"); (with indexes)
- relations are juxtaposed
- NS(DP)NA(JP);
NS(DP),NA(JP);
- S-rules always end in ";"
- NS(DP)NA(JP);
NS(DP)NA(JP)