- Generative grammar
In
theoretical linguistics , generative grammar refers to a particular approach to the study ofsyntax . A generative grammar of a language attempts to give a set of rules that will correctly predict which combinations of words will form grammatical sentences. In most approaches to generative grammar, the rules will also predict the morphology of a sentence.Generative grammar originates in the work of
Noam Chomsky , beginning in the late 1950s. (Early versions of Chomsky's theory were calledTransformational Grammar .) There are a number of competing versions of generative grammar currently practiced withinlinguistics . Chomsky's current theory is known as theMinimalist Program . Other prominent theories include or have includedHead-driven phrase structure grammar ,Lexical functional grammar ,Categorial grammar ,Relational grammar , andTree-adjoining grammar .Noam Chomsky has argued that many of the properties of a generative grammar arise from an "innate"Universal grammar , which is common to all languages. Proponents of generative grammar have argued that most grammar is not the result of communicative function and is not simply learned from the environment. In this respect, generative grammar takes a point of view different from functional andbehaviourist theories.Most versions of generative grammar characterize sentences as either
grammatical ly correct (also known as "well formed") or not. The rules of a generative grammar typically function as analgorithm to predict grammaticality as a discrete (yes-or-no) result. In this respect, it differs fromstochastic grammar which considers grammaticality as a probabilistic variable. However, some work in generative grammar (e.g. recent work byJoan Bresnan ) uses stochastic versions ofOptimality theory .Frameworks
There are a number of different approaches to generative grammar. Common to all is the effort to come up with a set of rules or principles that will account for the well-formed expressions of a
natural language . The term "generative grammar" has been associated with at least the following schools of linguistics:*
Transformational grammar (TG)
**Standard Theory (ST)
**Extended Standard Theory (EST)
**Revised Extended Standard Theory (REST)
**Principles and Parameters Theory (P&P)
***Government and Binding Theory (GB)
***Minimalist Program (MP)
*Relational Grammar (RG)
*Lexical-Functional Grammar (LFG)
*Generalized Phrase Structure Grammar (GPSG)
*Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG)
*Categorial Grammar
*Tree-Adjoining Grammar Historical development of models of generative grammar
Generative grammar has been under development since the late 1950s, and has undergone many changes in the types of rules and representations that are used to predict grammaticality. In tracing the historical development of ideas within generative grammar, it is useful to refer to various stages in the development of the theory.
tandard Theory (1957-1965)
The so-called Standard Theory corresponds to the original model of generative grammar laid out in Chomsky (1965). A core aspect of Standard Theory is a distinction between two different representations of a sentence, called
Deep Structure andSurface Structure . The two representations are linked to each other byTransformational grammar .Extended Standard Theory (1965-1973)
The so-called Extended Standard Theory was formulated in the late 1960s to early 1970s. Features are:
*syntactic constraints
*generalized phrase structures (X-bar theory )Revised Extended Standard Theory (1973-1980)
The so-called Revised Extended Standard Theory was formulated between 1973 and 1980.It contains
*restrictions uponX-bar theory (Jackendoff (1977)).
*assumption of the COMP position.
*Move α Relational grammar (ca. 1975-1990)
An alternative model of syntax based on the idea that notions like Subject, Direct Object, and Indirect Object play a primary role in grammar.
Government and Binding/Principles and Parameters theory (1981-1990)
Chomsky's "Lectures on Government and Binding" (1981) and "Barriers" (1986).
Minimalist Program (1990-present)
Context-free grammars
Generative grammars can be described and compared with the aid of the
Chomsky hierarchy proposed by Noam Chomsky in the 1950s. This sets out a series of types of formal grammars with increasing expressive power. Among the simplest types are theregular grammar s (type 3); Chomsky claims that regular grammars are not adequate as models for human language, because all human languages allow the center-embedding of strings within strings.At a higher level of complexity are the
context-free grammar s (type 2). The derivation of a sentence by a grammar can be depicted as a derivation tree. Linguists working in generative grammar often view such derivation trees as a primary object of study. According to this view, a sentence is not merely a string ofwords , but rather a tree with subordinate and superordinate branches connected at nodes.Essentially, the tree model works something like this example, in which S is a sentence, D is a
determiner , N anoun , V averb , NP anoun phrase and VP averb phrase :The resulting sentence could be "The dog ate the bone." Such a tree diagram is also called a
phrase marker . They can be represented more conveniently in text form, (though the result is less easy to read); in this format the above sentence would be rendered as:
[S [NP [D The ] [N dog ] ] [VP [V ate ] [NP [D the ] [N bone ] ] ] ]Chomsky has argued that phrase structure grammars are also inadequate for describing natural languages, and has formulated the more complex system of
transformational grammar . [cite journal | title=Three models for the description of language | year=1956 | last=Chomsky | first=Noam | journal=IRE Transactions on Information Theory | volume=2 | pages=113–124 | url=http://www.chomsky.info/articles/195609--.pdf | doi=10.1109/TIT.1956.1056813 ]Grammaticality judgements
When generative grammar was first proposed, it was widely hailed as a way of formalizing the implicit set of rules a person "knows" when they know their native language and produce grammatical utterances in it (
grammaticality intuitions ). However Chomsky has repeatedly rejected that interpretation; according to him, the grammar of a language is a statement of what it is that a person has to know in order to recognize an utterance as grammatical, but not a hypothesis about the processes involved in either understanding or producing language.In any case the reality is that most native speakers would reject many sentences produced even by a phrase structure grammar. For example, although very deep embeddings are allowed by the grammar, sentences with deep embeddings are not accepted by listeners, and the limit of acceptability is an empirical matter that varies between individuals, not something that can be easily captured in a formal grammar. Consequently, the influence of generative grammar in empirical
psycholinguistics has declined considerably.Music
Generative grammar has been used in
music theory and analysis such as byFred Lerdahl and inSchenkerian analysis . See:Chord progression#Rewrite rules .ee also
*
Phrase structure rules
*Cognitive linguistics
*Parsing References
Further reading
*Chomsky, Noam. 1965. Aspects of the theory of syntax. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
*Hurford, J. (1990) "Nativist and functional explanations in language acquisition". In I. M. Roca (ed.), Logical Issues in Language Acquisition, 85-136. Foris, Dordrecht.
*cite book | first=Daniela | last=Isac | coauthors= Charles Reiss | title= [http://linguistics.concordia.ca/i-language/ I-language: An Introduction to Linguistics as Cognitive Science] | year=2008 | publisher=Oxford University Press| id=ISBN 978-0199534203
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