Gradient well-formedness

Gradient well-formedness

Gradient well-formedness is a problem that arises in the analysis of linguistic data, in which a linguistic entity is neither completely grammatical nor completely ungrammatical. A native speaker may judge a word, phrase or pronunciation as "not quite right" or "almost there", rather than dismissing it as completely unacceptable or fully accepting it as well-formed. Thus, the acceptability of the given entity lies on a "gradient" between well-formedness and ill-formedness. Some generative linguists think that ill-formedness might be strictly additive, thus trying to figure out universal constraints by acquiring scalar grammaticality judgements from informants. Generally, however, gradient well-formedness is considered an unsolved problem in linguistics.

References

*citation
last=Featherston
first=Sam
year=2004
title=Judgements in syntax: Why they are good, how they can be better
url=http://www.sfb441.uni-tuebingen.de/~sam/papers/DGfS04.handout.pdf
accessdate=2008-04-09

*citation
last=Hayes
first=Bruce P.
month=August
year=1997
title=Gradient Well-Formedness in Optimality Theory
url=http://www.linguistics.ucla.edu/people/hayes/gradient.pdf
accessdate=2006-09-20


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  • Unsolved problems in linguistics — This article discusses currently unsolved problems in linguistics.Some of the issues below are commonly recognized as problems per se , i.e., it is general agreement that the solution is unknown. Others may be described as controversies, i.e.,… …   Wikipedia

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