<p>Grammar is said to be about defining all and only the 'good' sentences of a language, implying that there are other, 'bad' sentences - but it is hard to pin those down. A century ago, grammarians did not think that way, and they were right: linguists can and should dispense with 'starred sentence
Grammar Without Grammaticality: Growth and Limits of Grammatical Precision
โ Scribed by Geoffrey Sampson; Anna Babarczy
- Publisher
- De Gruyter Mouton
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 360
- Series
- Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs [TiLSM]; 254
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Linguists have standardly assumed that grammar is about identifying all and only the 'good' sentences of a language, which implies that there must be other, 'bad' sentencesย - but in practice most linguists know that it is hard to pin those down.ย The standard assumption is no more than an assumption.ย A century ago, grammarians did not think about their subject that way, and our book shows that the older idea was right:ย linguists can and should dispense with the concept 'starred sentence'.ย We draw on corpus data in order to support a different model of grammar, in which individuals refine positive grammatical habits to greater or lesser extents in diverse and unpredictable directions, but nothing is ever ruled out.ย Languages are not merely alternative methods of verbalizing universal logical forms.ย We use empirical evidence to shed light on the routes by which school-age children gradually expand their battery of grammatical resources, which turn out to be sometimes counter-intuitive.ย Our rejection of the 'starred sentence' concept has attracted considerable discussion, and we summarize the reactions and respond to our critics.ย The contrasting models of grammar described in this book entail contrasting pictures of human nature; our closing chapter shows that grammatical theory is not value-neutral but has an ethical dimension.
โฆ Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Table of contents
List of figures
List of tables
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. The bounds of grammatical refinement
Chapter 3. Where should annotation stop?
Chapter 4. Grammar without grammaticality
Chapter 5. Replies to our critics
Chapter 6. Grammatical description meets spontaneous speech
Chapter 7. Demographic correlates of speech complexity
Chapter 8. The structure of childrenโs writing
Chapter 9. Child writing and discourse organization
Chapter 10. Simple grammars and new grammars
Chapter 11. The case of the vanishing perfect
Chapter 12. Testing a metric for parse accuracy
Chapter 13. Linguistics empirical and unempirical
Chapter 14. William Gladstone as linguist
Chapter 15. Minds in Uniform: How generative linguistics regiments culture, and why it shouldnโt
References
Index
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