[Syntax] Constituents

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  • čas přidán 26. 04. 2017
  • We introduce constituents and constituency tests, such as the replacement test, do so test, movement test, and sentence fragment test.
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    Hello, welcome to TheTrevTutor. I'm here to help you learn your college courses in an easy, efficient manner. If you like what you see, feel free to subscribe and follow me for updates. If you have any questions, leave them below. I try to answer as many questions as possible. If something isn't quite clear or needs more explanation, I can easily make additional videos to satisfy your need for knowledge and understanding.

Komentáře • 117

  • @a.s.m.a6785
    @a.s.m.a6785 Před 6 lety +137

    Unfortunately our professor doesn't know how to explain as good as you did so, THANK YOU 🤓

  • @bloomfield112
    @bloomfield112 Před 6 lety +7

    This is exactly what I need.Many thanks to you,man.Carry on!!

  • @BilalAlshareef
    @BilalAlshareef Před 7 lety +5

    Thank you very much! Kindly, keep these videos coming. They are truly helpful.

  • @011_idaayureginacahyani6
    @011_idaayureginacahyani6 Před 2 lety +6

    it really helps! i'm an english literature student and just now I learned about syntax in class but I didn't really get it. You did a great job in explaining it

  • @LauraGayusi
    @LauraGayusi Před 3 lety +4

    I love the way you explain grammar in the English Language

  • @adibahdib
    @adibahdib Před 3 lety +2

    omg, thank you. This is a super simple and clear explanation!

  • @econekokun
    @econekokun Před 4 lety +1

    Ugh thanks for this! This was going to be my report and this made it much simpler to understand 👏

  • @jeffreytang7434
    @jeffreytang7434 Před rokem

    This is similarly to how I learned Japanese with cure dolly on structure thats why I found that even though my Japanese sucks I can still remember the structure and the contents and reconstruct the sentence again that way

  • @notoriouswhitemoth
    @notoriouswhitemoth Před 3 lety +2

    "run a marathon last night, did James"
    it's in a really high social register and pulls the tense out of 'ran', but it's doable

  • @bilalmassay6484
    @bilalmassay6484 Před 7 lety +3

    Thank you so much ... you really helped me

  • @berfin2293
    @berfin2293 Před rokem +2

    This video is what I need, thanks 🎉

  • @hannahal2564
    @hannahal2564 Před 6 lety +2

    Thank you, that was very helpful. So do the constituency tests of substitution and questioning work with NP? And the (so) test for VP??

  • @MaryamAli-gg6iu
    @MaryamAli-gg6iu Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome.. thank you for.. your way of explaination is clear and fruitfull
    I have a request
    would you explaine the maximum and the minimum bracketing in functional grammar?

  • @fizzyfennec
    @fizzyfennec Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much for this ❤️

  • @jonghap6566
    @jonghap6566 Před rokem

    Thank you so much!

  • @sayyidatikhamidah7239
    @sayyidatikhamidah7239 Před 6 lety

    Thanks alot The TrevTutor... I enjoyed ur vid.

  • @meijayana8471
    @meijayana8471 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank u for good explaination

  • @kimio3653
    @kimio3653 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for the video! I would like to share this video with my stduents :)

  • @learnenglishwithanmol397
    @learnenglishwithanmol397 Před 3 lety +1

    Very nicely explained 👍❤️

  • @angelinachen4063
    @angelinachen4063 Před 3 lety +2

    Hi, a quick question, about whether the bracketed string is a constituent or not
    a. The wellness blogger bumped [into the life coach].
    b. The wellness blogger strolled [into the yoga retreat].

  • @user-mh1ef5dn6h
    @user-mh1ef5dn6h Před 3 lety

    I hope you make a video of exercices. Thank you

  • @HamiidNouasria
    @HamiidNouasria Před 5 lety +1

    Thank You Sir !

  • @sapphirehodges4999
    @sapphirehodges4999 Před rokem

    At 4.20 I'm looking at replacing "ate his delicious" and it can be replaced with transitive verbs (The old man cooked broccoli, The old man loves broccoli. etc.) How do we deal with phrases that are not constituents but sometimes pass these tests anyway?
    I know a lot of linguists debate about syntactic theory and I'm also wondering at what point do linguists decide they have found a weakness or challenge in a theory and when we do say "Use discretion, it usually works but maybe not all the time and that's OK." ?
    (Thanks for the video! I'm reviewing some linguistics because I'm thinking about going back to school. :) )

  • @xttan5202
    @xttan5202 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for your videos! It has been useful in helping me understand some of the concepts better. Just wondering if you did any videos on crossover effects? I have a problem understanding the difference between strong and weak crossover effects.

  • @user-el7ho6xd6o
    @user-el7ho6xd6o Před 6 lety

    thank you very much!

  • @lonelym13
    @lonelym13 Před 6 lety

    Thank you!

  • @ashsoulmate
    @ashsoulmate Před 2 lety

    thank you so much!

  • @huethen5454
    @huethen5454 Před 2 lety

    Can't slowly ate fit the replacmentb constituent test? Obviously you can replace slowly ate with only one word, ate?

  • @norasiahalie9831
    @norasiahalie9831 Před 5 lety

    You so helping me thankyou so muuucchhhhhh

  • @awa1562
    @awa1562 Před rokem

    Thank you it realy clear but i have question you say in the last of the video every words can be constituent but in the begnning of the video you say that the constituent is agroup of words so how every words in its own can be constituent can you explan to me , please ?

  • @d.melisabalci7955
    @d.melisabalci7955 Před 3 lety +3

    I got a question. In the second example with the old man, we tried to insert [died] instead of [ate his delicious] when we're trying to see if we could group [ate his delicious] together and it didn't work. But we choose the verb "to die", which is an intransitive verb, whereas "to eat" is a transitive one. Isn't it one of the reasons we couldn't group them together? Let's say, for example, if we put sth like "cooked" broccoli, then wouldn't the sentence kinda make sense? I mean at this point it might need a "the" or "some" in front of the broccoli but still, not as weird as dying broccoli. Then is the problem here is that there's no other identifier such as "a" or "some" or does it work that way, by choosing a transitive verb instead.

    • @Chriswang0320
      @Chriswang0320 Před rokem +1

      You made the point brought by him that we need other constituency tests to see the best explanation or solution, in this case, I think fragment test could help to solve your question.

  • @jiayingliu-yt9gf
    @jiayingliu-yt9gf Před 8 měsíci

    4:52, what if we simply use "ate" to replace "ate his delicious", seems that the sentence still makes sense?

  • @kharboucha-pu9dj
    @kharboucha-pu9dj Před 2 lety

    Thanks

  • @babyylanaa
    @babyylanaa Před rokem

    thank you so muchhh

  • @antoniaskadberg3455
    @antoniaskadberg3455 Před 6 lety

    Is "last night" not the adjunct to the sentence? It is optional information, where as "ran a marathon" is not. You could just cut it out of the sentence without removing any important information as to what happened.

  • @candylover23435
    @candylover23435 Před 6 lety +4

    Do these test have different names ? I'm confused because I've learned them as wh-test, pro-form, movement, and coordination .

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +2

      Yeah, they sometimes have different names depending on the textbook or professor.

  • @hananjaber2374
    @hananjaber2374 Před 6 lety

    thanks a lot

  • @luissegabriellerutao2850
    @luissegabriellerutao2850 Před 6 lety +1

    just wanna clarify something :) isn't the whole sentence itself function as a construction since it is the maximal unit in syntax? and not as a constituent?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +3

      A constituent is just a grouping of words that is dominated by a single node. So all sentences are constituents by definition. It's apparent in sentences with complementizers.
      [Jane killed Mary] is a sentence and a constituent.
      [I believe that [Jane killed Mary]] contains the previous sentence and acts as a constituent.
      It would be weird to say that in the first case, it is not a constituent, but it is only a constituent when it is a complement of a complementizer.

  • @sot11cat
    @sot11cat Před 3 lety

    In 13:00 if we form the question
    Which boy did slowly eat his pancakes?
    Can we get as answer “a small”? Furthermore, I see that we may replace “a small” by “which” and form a wh-question. So, is the combination “a small” really a constituent?

    • @demidron.
      @demidron. Před 2 lety +1

      Syntactically, "small" is a constituent "a small" is not. We can't say "a small" because English, unlike many other languages, generally prohibits Article + Adjective without a following noun and we usually use a word like "one" to fill in for the noun: Which boy? → A small one.
      The fact that we can replace "a small" with "which" doesn't mean that "a small" is a consitituent. We can also simply drop "small" to say "a boy". We can regard "which" as a replacement for "a"
      a boy → which boy
      a small boy → which small boy
      So we also wouldn't expect that you could answer "which boy" simply with "small" because we essentially need an equivalent of "which" and an equivalent of "boy". "Which" can be replaced by "a" or "the" and "boy" could be replaced by "small boy" or "small one"

  • @samelangford2819
    @samelangford2819 Před 5 lety +1

    So i have a question.
    Identify a constiutent in the sentence
    His son bought a beautiful car for him last year.
    A- bought a
    B -Car for
    C-him last year
    D-his son
    E-a beatiful
    I think his son is a constituent.
    By the way can say that aside from the options above
    Last year
    Bought
    Car
    Beautiful
    Can they be a constituent? ( i believe yes inasmuch as i can replace them with something else.

  • @cankutbayhan5952
    @cankutbayhan5952 Před 3 lety

    hiya; but then? ran a marathon last night is what James did? how so? ran and did together? is it not supposed to be "to run / did" dunno though, not sure

  • @bonbonpony
    @bonbonpony Před 6 lety +4

    04:23 This is quite unfair, because you used a non-transitive verb "die", which obviously couldn't take "broccoli" as a parameter. But "ate his delicious" could be replaced by just "ate" or "cooked" which _can_ take a direct object, and the resulting sentence _would_ make sense :q
    BTW there's a nice way to see how constituents work with replacements in Mandarin Chinese: they have certain question words that they put in place of constituents in a sentence when they want to ask about that particular thing, kinda "making a slot" for that particular constituent to go there in the answer.

    • @siromarortiz
      @siromarortiz Před 5 lety

      ATE would change the semantics of the sentence, so it doesnt work. It wasnt mentioned but the key to all of these is the sentence must be preserved. So, the old man ate means he ate past tense. So, ate his brocoli would need to be replaced with something stating what was eaten.

    • @bonbonpony
      @bonbonpony Před 5 lety +1

      So how exactly does it change the meaning? Both are about eating the broccoli.
      My point is that the test, in the form it's been stated in the video, doesn't seem to be a very good test, because sometimes you can substitute what was _not_ a constituent, and yet obtain a grammatically correct sentence. The example in the video didn't work indeed, but it didn't work from a different reason than stated - not because this part was _not_ a constituent, but because he replaced it with a verb that was not transitive.

    • @MultiPC007
      @MultiPC007 Před 4 lety

      My understanding is that "ate his delicious" is not a proper phrase which could be replaced in the first place. It needs to contain a noun to be a verb phrase, right?

  • @narushin3455
    @narushin3455 Před 7 měsíci

    professor i wanna ask y a question about this clause JOHN WANTS ADAM TO LEAVE , I wanna know why we have here 2 subjects and 2 verbs even to leave here is a non finite verb.thank you

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 měsíci

      You may want to look way ahead at the “control” verbs. Basically there’s an actor of wanting and an actor of leaving, so there’s criteria (semantics) says we need two actors (subjects)

  • @user-bi4ks1pz5f
    @user-bi4ks1pz5f Před 8 měsíci

    question, for the example of: ate his broccoli, can't we replace that with sow/saw broccoli. Since it is a verb

  • @meijayana8471
    @meijayana8471 Před 4 lety

    I have a question how many contituents of this sentence (When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceedingly great joy)?

    • @meijayana8471
      @meijayana8471 Před 4 lety

      Is every single word in that sentence is a constituent?

  • @beratbayazit7255
    @beratbayazit7255 Před rokem

    In 4.24 , you used the verb "died" yet, if you used bought, was it going to make sense ?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před rokem +1

      Died works because it’s intransitive and closes off a VP. Bought is a transitive verb so it still needs something to close off the VP.

  • @johanna9272
    @johanna9272 Před 2 lety

    is (a marathon last night) also a constituent?

  • @doreenndunge846
    @doreenndunge846 Před 2 lety

    What is coordination

  • @ramadanhasani
    @ramadanhasani Před 7 lety

    Just to be sure : is the TP the same as a FinP (finite phrase)?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety

      I have never seen FinP used before. I would say no, since that means that TPs could not be InfPs, but T can host INF markers.

  • @oumaimabenkina7759
    @oumaimabenkina7759 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for your explanation , but the part of movement is not clear for me

  • @HamiidNouasria
    @HamiidNouasria Před 5 lety

    are all constituent phrases ?

  • @norahalsaeed1180
    @norahalsaeed1180 Před 2 lety

    I want to ask is it about the meaning ?

  • @shubhamshinde3593
    @shubhamshinde3593 Před 7 lety +2

    Wish you were more famous...

  • @Rainfish9
    @Rainfish9 Před 6 lety +3

    What about the old man loved broccoli?

  • @bonbonpony
    @bonbonpony Před 5 lety +1

    So how about a phrase like this one: "the beautiful country of Canada" - let's say I want to decompose it further into its constituent parts. Is "country of Canada" a constituent? Or maybe it's "the beautiful country"?

    • @jiayingliu-yt9gf
      @jiayingliu-yt9gf Před 8 měsíci

      "Canada" is a proper noun and refers to the specific country.
      "Country of Canada" is a noun phrase, where "country" functions as the head noun and "of Canada" is a prepositional phrase that acts as an attributive phrase, describing the country. This can be considered a constituent because "country of Canada" functions as a single unit to describe the noun "Canada."
      "The beautiful country" is another noun phrase, where "country" is the head noun, and "the beautiful" is an adjective phrase modifying "country." This can also be considered a constituent because "the beautiful country" functions as a single unit to describe the noun "Canada."
      So, both "the beautiful country" and "country of Canada" are constituents within the larger phrase "the beautiful country of Canada."

  • @Nobody-gv7ef
    @Nobody-gv7ef Před 3 lety +2

    Cant we replace "ate his delicious" by the word "cooked"? I am kinda confused

    • @israa809
      @israa809 Před 3 lety

      I was literally thinking the same thing lol

    • @israa809
      @israa809 Před 3 lety

      based on the second example "Jeff slept in an expensive hotel", the fact that he said that just "slept" works and is a constituent kinda shows that the first example is a constituent too :/
      pretty sure you can say "The old man *ate* broccoli", "ate" acting as the replacement for "ate his delicious".
      long story short, I think he just made a mistake with that one (hope this made sense)

    • @Nobody-gv7ef
      @Nobody-gv7ef Před 3 lety

      I don't really understand whats the point of learning all these topics 😐 I have a whole course on linguistics & the exam is knocking at the door, now I am all fucked up 😭

  • @yichen3890
    @yichen3890 Před 6 lety

    Thanks so much for the series! Struggling with the final. One question pls: "Ran a marathon last night is what James did."--I doubt if this is grammatical? Thx!

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      It's grammatical

    • @najibtant8664
      @najibtant8664 Před 6 lety

      Yeah!
      He should have written 'Running a marathon last night is what James did' instead.

    • @najibtant8664
      @najibtant8664 Před 6 lety

      Thank you for your efforts!
      yes, it is grammatical, but it the meaning isn't appropriate.

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      I don't understand what you mean, "the meaning isn't appropriate".

    • @najibtant8664
      @najibtant8664 Před 6 lety

      Which would be better to start with a simple tense verb 'ran', or a gerund 'running'?
      or both of them are correct?

  • @ashklein9189
    @ashklein9189 Před rokem

    Where is coordination test and deletion test?? 🥺

  • @joerimaet.indiano816
    @joerimaet.indiano816 Před rokem

    What does TP means?

  • @Abdrahimmakhache
    @Abdrahimmakhache Před 6 lety

    Sir , I would like to know the difference between a phrase and a constituent , because they seem similar .

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety

      They can be similar, but constituents are any group of words that function as a unit, including individual words. So, depending on your theory, you may have constituents that are individual words and not phrases. Generally, they are the same.

    • @Abdrahimmakhache
      @Abdrahimmakhache Před 6 lety

      I roughly understood what you said , but I would like you to give me an example for both if you don't mind.

    • @Abdrahimmakhache
      @Abdrahimmakhache Před 6 lety

      My point of view is phrases can be constituents , but not all the time . If you notice some phrases cannot go under the tests of constituents.

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety

      But by definition, all phrases are constituents. This is pretty much just by definition. In a given framework, you may have constituents that are not phrases, but all phrases are definitely constituents. Otherwise, it would not be a phrase.

    • @Abdrahimmakhache
      @Abdrahimmakhache Před 6 lety

      I understoond now . Thank you so much sir .

  • @khaoulahamdaoui6004
    @khaoulahamdaoui6004 Před 3 lety

    Plz can u answer my question, what is the displacement of :I like chocolate

  • @mrmr1667
    @mrmr1667 Před 4 lety

    Could u plz help me with these sentences:
    1.The book I'm trying to read is very interesting.
    2.She will definitely win each and every contests.
    3. We can try to understand their problems and solve them.
    4. I want to buy the red car you showed me last night.
    Heeeelllppp plz I couldn't answer it

  • @layalali7006
    @layalali7006 Před 5 lety

    Hey ..is these words are a constituent
    She is

  • @siromarortiz
    @siromarortiz Před 5 lety

    I dont understand why EVERY individual word is a constituent? When many singular words wont pass any of these tests?

    • @bonbonpony
      @bonbonpony Před 5 lety

      They don't have to pass ALL the tests (I don't even think this would be possible). Sometimes it's enough if they pass just ONE test. And every single word can be replaced by another word of the same type, so they're definitely constituents (or constituent parts of some greater whole). There's no whole without parts, to there will always be some constituent parts if there's a whole.

  • @yinuoli6726
    @yinuoli6726 Před 4 lety

    So is "A Marathon last night" a constituent?

    • @demidron.
      @demidron. Před 2 lety

      It can be if "last night" is a modifier of "marathon", but not if it's a modifier of "ran".

  • @Ceahorse
    @Ceahorse Před 6 lety +3

    replacement test fail? [ate his delicious]--> grew...

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      Yeah, it fails here because the whole VP isn't being replaced. In both cases, the object N remains so [ate his] and [ate his delicious] would provide grammatically correct sentences. That's why we use multiple tests!

    • @yasminb6962
      @yasminb6962 Před 4 lety

      @@Trevtutor I still do not understand. If the [ate his delicious] can be replaced by a single word (grew) then why is it still not considered a constituent? Must one try out many different tests before concluding that it is or is not a constituent?

  • @Ahmed-Benazzi
    @Ahmed-Benazzi Před 5 lety

    5.08 why ate his is not constituent we can say the old man cooks delicious broccoli

  • @NataliaYukiMiku
    @NataliaYukiMiku Před 3 lety +1

    Mi loco eso está jevi, pero no te pregunté

  • @rensdewit4493
    @rensdewit4493 Před 3 lety

    Why is [slowly ate] not a constituent? You can say: ‘A small boy devoured his pancakes.’

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 3 lety +1

      This is why multiple tests are used. Although it passes the substitution test, it does not pass any of the others.
      *It was [slowly ate] that a small boy his pancakes.
      *A small boy slowly ate his pancakes and did so his eggs.
      What did a small boy do to his pancakes?
      *Slowly ate

    • @rensdewit4493
      @rensdewit4493 Před 3 lety

      @@Trevtutor Thank you very much! I think I get it now.

  • @jacobanthony9412
    @jacobanthony9412 Před 3 lety

    wow i still have no idea what is going on

  • @kneecapbuster807
    @kneecapbuster807 Před 2 lety

    I guess I'm just straight stupid because I still don't understand XO

  • @user-cq8fo9fk4v
    @user-cq8fo9fk4v Před 6 lety

    خبلتني ام الكرمر😣😣😣😣

  • @winkyledford3719
    @winkyledford3719 Před 6 lety +2

    i know who you are

  • @lightofmylife1616
    @lightofmylife1616 Před 5 lety

    my professor doesnt explain shit!

  • @lobnaabdelaziz4881
    @lobnaabdelaziz4881 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you so much!