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Detecting Complements and Adjuncts Rajat Kumar Mohanty Center for Indian Language Technology IIT Bombay.

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Presentation on theme: "Detecting Complements and Adjuncts Rajat Kumar Mohanty Center for Indian Language Technology IIT Bombay."— Presentation transcript:

1 Detecting Complements and Adjuncts Rajat Kumar Mohanty Center for Indian Language Technology IIT Bombay

2 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Outline X-bar Theory Revisited Complement and Adjuncts within an NP Detecting Complements and Adjuncts  Structural Ambiguity  Phrase Structure Rules for Noun Phrases  Reordering of Adjuncts  Co-ordination  Extraposition  Preposing  Co-occurrence Restrictions Generalization Exercises

3 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT X-bar Theory It tells us how words are combined to make phrases and sentences. It captures the commonality between different types of phrases, which PS-rules cannot.

4 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT X-bar Projection XP X ` XZP YP (Maximal projection) (Intermediate projection) (Minimal projection)

5 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT X-bar Projection XP X ` XZP YP (X-phrase) (Head) (Complement) (Specifier)

6 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT X-bar Projection XP X ` X ZP YP (Complement) (Specifier) X ` ZP(Head) (Adjunct)

7 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT X-bar Projection NP N ` PP complement NP specifier John’s N head solution to the problem

8 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT X-bar Projection NP N ` of the cricket match the N ` discussion in the cabinet meeting Det specifier N head PP complement PP adjunct

9 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Complement and Adjuncts within an NP NP N ` N head PP adjunct Det specifier of NLP a N ` PP complement student with long hair

10 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Structural Ambiguity in an NP A student [of high moral principles] Is there any ambiguity in this NP ?  a person who studies high moral principles  a student who has high moral principles This ambiguity can be characterized in structural terms

11 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT a person who studies high moral principles NP N ` of high moral principles a student Det specifier N head PP complement

12 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT a student who has high moral principles NP N ` of moral principles a N ` student Det specifier N head PP adjunct

13 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Examples 1. Arguments [with John] are often pointless. (???) 2. Arguments [with few premises] are often pointless. (???) 3. Arguments [with John] [with few premises] are often pointless. 4. *Arguments [with few premises] [with John] are often pointless.

14 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Phrase Structure Rules for Noun Phrases The complement must precede an adjunct. Rules  NP  N’ (PP)adjunct rule  N’  N (PP)complement rule Examples 1. a student [of Physics] [with long hair] 2. * a student [with long hair] [of Physics]

15 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Phrase Structure Rules for Noun Phrases Adjunct rules are recursive. A complement rule is not recursive, i.e., it can apply only once. Examples 1. a student [with long hair] [with short arms] 2. * a student [of Physics] [of Chemistry]

16 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Reordering of Adjuncts Unlike complements which have to precede adjuncts, adjuncts can be freely reordered with respect to each other. 1. a student [with long hair] [with short arms] 2. a student [with short arms] [with long hair]

17 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Co-ordination Complements can be co-ordinated with other complements. a student [of linguistics] and [of Computer Science] Adjuncts can be co-ordinated with other adjuncts. a student [with short arms] and [with long hair] But adjunct PPs and complements PPs cannot be co-ordinated.  * a student [of Physics] and [with short arms]  * a student [with short arms] and [of Physics]

18 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Extraposition Adjuncts are less tightly bound to the head noun than complements. It is possible to extrapose adjuncts PPs but not possible to extrapose complement PPs. Examples 1. A student [with long hair] came to see me yesterday. 2. ? A student came to see me yesterday [with long hair]. 3. * A student came to see me yesterday [of Physics].

19 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Preposing Complements and Adjuncts behave differently with respect to preposing. Examples 1. [What branch of linguistics] is John a student of? 2. * [What kind of hair] is John a student with? Note that Complements and Adjuncts go in opposite directions with respect to Extraposition and Preposing. Heads are more closely related to their complements than to their adjuncts.

20 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Co-occurrence Restrictions Heads place significant restrictions (i.e., subcategorisation) on what can appear as their complement. 1. a student of NLP 2. * a boy of NLP 3. * a girl of NLP 4. * a teenager of NLP No similar restrictions are imposed on adjuncts.  a student with long hair  a boy with long hair  a girl with long hair  a teenager with long hair

21 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Generalization Heads are more closely related to their complements than to their adjuncts. Subcategorisation restrictions hold only between a head and its complement, not between a head and its adjuncts.

22 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Exercise-I Identify the complements and adjuncts in the following NPs: 1. your reply [to my letter] 2. the attack [on Starr] 3. the loss [of the ship] 4. John’s disgust [at Mary’s behavior] 5. his disillusionment [with life] 6. the book [on the table] 7. the advertisement [on the television] 8. the fight [after the match] 9. his resignation [because of the scandal] 10. a cup [with a broken handle]

23 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Exercise-II Provide trees for the bracketed NPs in the following sentences:  I met [a specialist in fibreoptics from Japan].  [The journey from Mumbai to Delhi on the Christmas Day] was tiring.  [The discussion of the riots in the bar] was full and frank.  [The solution to the problem given by John] is better than the solution given by Mary.  [The solution to last week’s quiz on page 20] is a better one.

24 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT Sources and Suggested Readings Introduction to Government and Binding Theory, 2nd edn., Liliane Haegeman, Blackwell, 1994. Syntactic Structures Revisited, Howard Lasnik, MIT Press, 2000. Bhatt, R. 2003. Introduction to Syntax. Principles and Parameters, Peter Culicover, Oxford, 1997.

25 Monday, July 11, 2005 CFILT THANK YOU


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