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Draw trees for these sentences. Yesterday Emma bought a book. Yesterday Emma bought a book about cooking. Yesterday Emma bought a book in a bookstore. (ambiguous)

Post-Syntax Chapter Practice 1

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Post-Syntax Chapter Practice 1. Draw trees for these sentences. Yesterday Emma bought a book. Yesterday Emma bought a book about cooking. Yesterday Emma bought a book in a bookstore. (ambiguous). Post-Syntax Chapter Practice 2. Draw trees for these sentences. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Draw trees for these sentences.

Yesterday Emma bought a book.

Yesterday Emma bought a book about cooking.

Yesterday Emma bought a book in a bookstore. (ambiguous)

Page 2: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Draw trees for these sentences.

Yesterday Emma put a book on the table.

Yesterday Emma put a book about cooking under the table.

Yesterday Emma put a book about cooking on the table in the hall. (ambiguous)

Page 3: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

“The study of the linguistic meaning of morphemes, words, phrases, and sentences is called semantics.”

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 140.

Page 4: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Lexical semantics

Phrasal or sentential semantics

Pragmatics

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 140.

Page 5: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Semantics Words Lexical Semantics Phrases Phrasal Semantics Sentences Sentential Semantics

Pragmatics Discourse Pragmatics (Meaning in Context)

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 140.

Page 6: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Word Sentence meaningful ambiguous synonymous opposites reference (can) sense truth value X entailment X

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 140ff.

Page 7: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

“Learning a language includes learning the agreed-upon meanings of certain strings of sounds and learning how to combine these meaningful units into larger units that also convey meaning.”

“All speakers of a language share a basic vocabulary—the sounds and meanings of morphemes and words.”

[My emphasis.]

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2003. An Introduction to Language. Boston, MA: Wadsworth, p. 173.

Page 8: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Pronunciation

Meaning

(including Semantic Properties)

Relationship to other words

Grammatical category

How to use it in sentences.

Potential collocations and idioms

Spelling

Page 9: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Truth

Entailment / Logic

Ambiguity

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 140-143.

Page 10: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

“…our knowledge about the truth value of sentences [is a function of] taking the meanings of words and combining them according to the syntactic structure of the sentence.”

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 146.

Page 11: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

All the Individual Word Meanings

+

Syntax

=

Sentence Meaning

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 144ff.

Page 12: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Anomaly

Metaphor

Idioms

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 147-152.

Page 13: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Lexical item with more than one word. Meaning of the idiom cannot be inferred.

They must be LEARNED (like other words, morphemes).

They must be stored in the Mental Lexicon.

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 151-152.

Page 14: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

Reference

Sense

Mental image

Various lexical relations

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman & Nina Hyams. 2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, pp. 154-156.

Page 15: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

(Boldfaced items may be debatable)

a. T b. C c. S d. S e. S f. C g. S h. T i. S j. S k. T l. S m. S n. T o. C p. S q. C r. C s. C t. S u. C v. S w. C x. C y. S z. C

Page 16: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

a. T Queens are monarchs. b. C Kings are female. c. S Kinds are poor. d. S Queens are ugly. e. S Queens are mothers. f. C Kings are mothers. g. S Dogs are four-legged. h. T Cats are felines. i. S Cats are stupid. j. S Dogs are carnivores.

Page 17: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

k. T George Washington is George Washington.

l. S George Washington is the first president.

m. S George Washington is male. n. T Uncles are male. o. C My aunt is a man. p. S Witches are wicked. q. C My brother is a witch. ?? r. C My sister is an only child. s. C The evening star isn’t the evening

star.

Page 18: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

t. S The evening star isn’t Venus. u. C Babies are adults. v. S Babies can lift one ton. w. C Puppies are human. x. C My bachelor friends are all

married. y. S My bachelor friends are all

lonely. z. C Colorless ideas are green.

Page 19: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

a. We laughed at the colorful ball. Lexically ambiguous:

ball (toy children play with); (dance party)

b. He was knocked over by the punch. Lexically ambiguous:

punch (using the fist to hit someone); (drink at a party)

Structurally ambiguous: He was next to the punch when he was knocked over.

The punch knocked him over.

Page 20: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

c. The police were urged to stop drinking by the fifth.

Lexically ambiguous: fifth (5th day of the month); (a fifth of a gallon of whiskey??)

Structurally ambiguous: when they should stop drinkingThey should not drink a whole fifth of whiskey when they drink.

Page 21: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

d. I said I would file it on Thursday. Lexically ambiguous: file (folder containing information); (tool for smoothing rough surfaces) Structurally ambiguous: I said it on Thursday.the filing will be done on Thursday

Page 22: Post-Syntax Chapter  Practice  1

k. run down l. violin case m. bill/Bill; house/House n. stud tires; out o. dog bite victim p. lack of brains q. death (whose?) r. eye drops (N); eye drops (NP VP) s. try; shooting defendant (Adj N) or (V

NP)t. Queen Mary (person or ship)