Andrew Carnie

The Syntax Workbook


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      Wbe4: SEMANTIC VS SYNTACTIC JUDGEMENTS

       [Application of Knowledge; Basic]

      Each of the following sentences might be considered to be ungrammatical, unacceptable, or just odd. For each sentence, indicate whether the ungrammaticality or oddness has to do with syntax (form) or semantics (meaning) or both.

      1 The chocolate-covered sausage sincerely wanted her mother-in-law to leave.

      2 What do you wonder who chased?

      3 Cat the dog the bark at.

      4 Andrew is a professor and not a professor.

      5 Danced makes me to have tired.

      WBE5: I-LANGUAGE VS. E-LANGUAGE

       [Application of knowledge; Intermediate]

      What follows are a bunch of statements about French. Try to determine if they are about i-language or e-language or both.

      1 French is spoken in many countries in Africa

      2 When Maggie was learning French, she had trouble getting the gender of nouns.

      3 In Canada, road signs are in both French and English.

      4 French pronominal objects appear before the participle.

      5 Suzette, although a fluent speaker of Parisian French, has a lot of trouble understand- ing people from Montreal.

      ANSWERS

       WBE1. PRESCRIPTIVE RULES

      1 This sentence ends in a preposition. Prescriptively it should be In(to) what did you put the present?

      2 The complement of a comparative is supposed to be in the nominative case. Prescrip- tively, this should be She’s smarter than he. The reasoning is that the sentence is really a shortening of She’s smarter than he is.

      3 This sentence has a split infinitive (to boldly go). Prescriptively, this should be to go boldly where no man has gone before.

      4 Slow is an adjective, not an adverb, but here it modifies a verb. The prescriptively correct form is He walks too slowly.

      5 The adverb hopefully is supposed to only mean “in a hopeful manner”; the weather is unlikely to be hopeful. Prescriptively it should be I hope that the weather will turn sunny soon.

      6 The string of words that follows something is a restrictive relative clause and should be introduced by that. An alternate non-restrictive meaning could be forced by in- serting a comma before the which. Prescriptively this should be I found out something that will disturb you greatly.

      7 Who represents the object of the verb see, so should be in the accusative form whom (i.e., Whom did you see?).

      8 This one is hard for American speakers to spot. Hardly is a negative adverb, so this is seen as a case of double negation. In prescriptive terms it should be I can hardly sleep.

      9 Less is supposed to be used with mass nouns (nouns like water or air) and item is not a mass noun, so prescriptively this should be 10 items or fewer.

      10 The prescriptively correct form is different from. Than is supposed to be a conjunction rather than a preposition, and so can’t be used to connect an adjective with a pro- noun. So prescriptively this should be My view of grammar is different from yours.

      11 At least in prescriptive British English, the correct future auxiliary that is used with first-person subjects (i.e., I, we) is shall, not will. So, this is prescriptively I shall not enjoy it.

      12 When the word if marks a counterfactual conditional (i.e., it is used to describe a state of being that isn’t actually true), then the verb should be in its subjunctive form. So, this sentence would be If I were a linguist, then I wouldn’t have to study prescriptive rules.

      13 Prescriptive grammarians tell us to avoid passives. Sentence (m) is a passive. The active form of this would be something like You didn’t complete the homework effi- ciently.

      14 According to prescriptive grammar each other is only supposed to be used when there are two participants, so “proper” grammar would have this as All of the linguists at the conference congratulated one another.

      15 Me is the accusative form of the pronoun, so it’s supposed to be used only in object positions or after a preposition. In this sentence, the pronoun is in the subject position so it’s supposed to be the nominative I. The order of the noun John and the pronoun is also reversed from prescriptive order. The “correct” form for this sentence is John and I are going to the movies later.

      16 The conjunction like is supposed to mean “similar to” rather than “as an example”. So, the prescriptive interpretation of this sentence is one where the speaker wants to learn a language that’s similar to French, but not French itself. Prescriptively, if you intend an “as an example” meaning you’re supposed to use such as instead of like: I want to learn a new language, such as French.

       WBE2. SCIENTIFIC METHOD PRACTICE

      Question 1: Sentence (d) is predicted by the hypothesis: The first word in the declara- tive/statement form is the second word in the yes/no question, and vice versa.

      Question 2: Sentence (f), however, is not predicted: it is the fourth word of sentence (e) that appears first in the question.

      Question 3: Hypothesis 1 predicts that the yes/no question form of sentence (9) would be *Old the hobbit will eat the magic beans. The second word (old) is inverted with the first (the).

      Question 4: Hypothesis 2 should be something like “Yes/no questions are formed by moving the auxiliary of the equivalent declarative sentence to the front” or “Yes/no questions are formed by reversing the positions of the subject and the auxiliary.” Your wording may vary.

       WB3. USING CORPORA FOR DOING SYNTACTIC RESEARCH

      Question 1: For me, sentence (d) is only grammatical with a lot of context (see the sentences in answer to Question 4 below), but to the extent it’s okay, it has to mean that Sean puffed air across him. Sentence (c) by contrast is completely grammatical and can mean either “Sean didn’t show up for their meeting” or “Sean used a puff of air to clear all the dust off of him”.

      Question 2: Because of the way Google and search engines like it work, the exact numbers for this experiment will vary from day to day. But the general pattern of effect should be found no matter when the experiment is done. Here are the results I got on June 4th, 2019. The numbers are not exact, as Google only offers an approximation once the numbers get large enough.

      i) blow me off