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Chapter 4 Words and Sentences

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Title: Chapter 4 Words and Sentences


1
Chapter 4 Words and Sentences
2
Overview
  • From Morphology
  • The analysis of words
  • and how they are structured
  • To Syntax
  • The analysis of phrases and sentences
  • and how they are structured.

3
Morphology
  • Words vs morphemes
  • Morphemes as smallest units of meaning in a
    language
  • respectful disrespectful
  • roommate stirfry
  • firefighter
  • Manhattan.

4
Morphological Analysis
  • Describing morphemes
  • Analyzing their arrangements.

5
Describing Morphemes Bases
  • Form foundations of words
  • Establish basic meanings
  • English fish talk
  • Shinzwani -lo- (fish) -lagu- (talk)
  • Czech piv- (beer)

6
Kinds of Bases
  • Roots
  • Serve as underlying foundation
  • Cant be broken down any further
  • English fish
  • Shinzwani -lo- (fish)
  • Stems
  • Derived from roots
  • By means of affixes (see affix slides)
  • English fishing fishing talker talker
  • Shinzwani loa -loa (fishing)
  • Can have additional affixes attached
  • English talkers talkers
  • Shinzwani nikuloa nikuloa (I am fishing).

7
Describing Morphemes Affixes
  • Attach to bases
  • Add grammatical information
  • English -er -ing
  • fisher, fishing, talker, talking
  • Shinzwani hu- (to) niku- (I am)
  • huloa (to fish), hulagua (to talk)
  • nikuloa (I am fishing), nikulagua (I am
    talking)
  • Czech -o -a -Ø
  • pivo (beer), piva ((2, 3, 4) beers), piv ((5)
    beers).

8
Kinds of Affixes
  • Prefixes
  • impossible
  • unlikely
  • Suffixes
  • walking
  • Infixes
  • fanbloodytastic
  • Circumfixes
  • mlozi (fisherman)
  • Reduplication
  • mpolempole (very slow)
  • Interweaving
  • kitaab (book)
  • Portmanteau
  • Blog
  • Brunch

9
What Affixes DO
  • Derivation
  • Changing one kind of word into another
  • verbs into nouns read -- reader -lo- -- mlozi
  • adjectives into verbs modern -- modernize
  • Inflection
  • Showing relationships among words in a group
  • tenses hunted -- hunting
  • comparisons big -- bigger -- biggest
  • persons I fish -- she fishes
  • number cat -- cats mpaha zimpaha (cat/cats).

10
How Many Morphemes?
  • The dogs chased the cats into the bushes.

11
How Many Morphemes?
  • The dog-z chas-t the cat-s in-to the bush-ez.
  • What is the difference between z and s?
  • And what about ez?

12
Analyzing ArrangementFree and Bound Morphemes
  • Free morphemes are like bases
  • Can stand alone
  • e.g., words speak respect Manhattan
  • Bound morphemes are like affixes
  • Must be attached to other morphemes
  • e.g., affixes -er -ing dis- -ful
  • speak-er speak-ing dis-respect-ful
  • But note roots can also be BOUND MORPHEMES
  • e.g., Shinzwani -lo- fish, Czech piv- beer
  • Hierarchy among affixes
  • English derive first, then inflect
  • helpers (not helpser).

13
Allomorphs
  • Variant forms of a single morpheme
  • e.g., Shinzwani (see page 90 in textbook)
  • singular-
  • /shi-/ with -ri, -sahani, -kombe
  • /mu-/ with -hono, -ndru
  • plural-
  • /zi-/ with -ri, -sahani, -kombe
  • /mi-/ with hono, -ndru
  • e.g., English cats, dogs, horses
  • -plural
  • /-s/ following voiceless stops
  • /-z/ following voiced stops and vowels
  • /-Iz/ following fricatives.

14
How Why Allomorphs Change
  • Adjusting to neighboring sounds
  • called morphophonemic conditioning
  • English cats, dogs, horses improbable,
    illogical
  • KiSwahili W/R 4.11 (pages 74-75)
  • Reflecting semantic categories
  • called semantic conditioning
  • KiSwahili W/R 4.12 (pages 76-77)

15
Syntax
  • How words combine into phrases sentences
  • Note fuzzy boundary between morphology and syntax
  • Shinzwani nitsohuvenza
  • Iwillyoulike
  • All one word
  • English I will like you
  • Four different words.

16
Analyzing Syntax
  • Finding and testing substitution frames
  • Also called slots and fillers
  • The cat in the hat
  • The cat in the basket
  • The cat in the tree
  • Mpaha isenda mjini The cat is going
    to town
  • Mwana asenda mjini The child is going to
    town
  • Gari lisenda mjini The car is
    going to town
  • Mtu mzuri mmoja ule -- that one
    good person
  • Kikapu kizuri kimoja kile -- that one good
    basket
  • Gari zuri moja lile --
    that one good car.

17
Labeling Substitution Frames
  • Let the language be your guide
  • Be prepared for different categories
  • Grammatical gender
  • Czech masculine, feminine, neuter
  • Shinzwani human, animal, body part, useful,
    abstract,
  • Case
  • Czech subject, object, possession, location,
  • The effect of obligatory categories
  • Grammatical categories that must be expressed.

18
Ordering Substitution Frames
  • Restrictions
  • Which words can go together?
  • The hat in the cat?
  • The cat exploded on the rug?
  • Roasting a pot of coffee?
  • Which orders are permitted?
  • the black cat vs le chat noir
  • (the) good person vs mtu mzuri
  • Anymore I dont eat pizza?
  • SVO languages and prepositions?
  • The cat in the tree vs Mpaha mwirijuu.
  • Let the language be your guide.

19
Ambiguities
  • Indicate alternative substitution frames
  • Cow kills farmer with ax
  • (newspaper headline)
  • Put more H2O in the coffee, then the bones
  • (message on chalkboard in physical anthro lab)
  • Fruit flies like a banana
  • (attributed to Groucho Marx).

20
Kinds of Grammars
  • Prescriptive
  • Provides a model of proper speech
  • Many schoolteachers, even today
  • Descriptive
  • Describes a language structure on its own terms
  • Boas and anthropologists, 1900s
  • Generative
  • Generates all possible sentences of a language
  • Noam Chomsky, 1950s.

21
Generating Sentences
  • Begin at the level of Deep Structure
  • Phrase Structure Rules
  • produce abstract sentences
  • Transformation Rules
  • change sentence structures
  • Does time fly like an arrow?
  • Phonological rules assign sounds
  • Result is pronounceable sentence
  • At the level of Surface Structure.

22
Advantages of Generative Grammar
  • Trees show structure more clearly.

23
Disadvantages of Generative Grammar
  • Relies on introspection
  • You need to know the language well enough to
    judge grammaticality of sentences
  • Assumes universal underlying structure
  • Accessible through any language
  • But new data continues to challenge universals
  • Not as useful in learning new languages
  • Working with surface level sentences
  • Requires working with actual speakers
  • And discovery of substitution frames
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