[Introduction to Linguistics] Word Order, Grammar, and Phrase Structure Rules

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  • čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
  • In this video we look at word order in languages, grammaticality, prescriptive and descriptive grammar, as well as some basic phrase structure rules.
    Old video. Updated video in the playlist on the channel.
    Check out my NEW syntax series on my CZcams channel for more syntax!
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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 • 89

  • @malteeaser101
    @malteeaser101 Před 6 lety +12

    I know nothing about linguistics, but I know I'm going to love it.

  • @ashlyrichmond3322
    @ashlyrichmond3322 Před 7 lety +43

    Thanks for all of the videos I am totally lost in my linguistics class and all of the videos have helped me get caught up with what the textbook is reffering to.

  • @podcast672
    @podcast672 Před 4 lety

    No English teacher can be a good teacher unless or until he/ she is with a good sense of linguistics. I'm getting a great help from this. Thanks to all.

  • @sharzashakeel1253
    @sharzashakeel1253 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you so much for jotting down these complex topics into easy bits. it has helped us a lot as non-native English speaker we do not normally learn these things in schools.

  • @Jacob-ez9hc
    @Jacob-ez9hc Před 3 lety

    stumbled upon this video series and i am very excited for my upcoming linguistics class now! thanks

  • @YoussefOsse
    @YoussefOsse Před 7 lety +18

    In the sentence ''The dog ran away''. Away is an adverb modifies the verb ran. It is not a preposition.

    • @profightcompilations4764
      @profightcompilations4764 Před 6 lety

      Youssef Osse could you not interpret it as saying that you ran to a location-- that location being "away"? Away wouldn't not be a specific location but it would be similar to saying that the boy ran "there". There is more specific but I think it can be argued that away and there are the same grammatically, correct? Though I can see the argument can go both ways.

  • @khmerlinguistics7882
    @khmerlinguistics7882 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for your explanation in this video.

  • @fatyfati5661
    @fatyfati5661 Před 5 lety

    Good explanation makes the lesson easy thank you so much !!

  • @nonkululekochitya1253
    @nonkululekochitya1253 Před 7 lety +2

    I am writing my first exam tomorrow, and I know I will make it. Thank you so much.

  • @edwindelgadorivera245
    @edwindelgadorivera245 Před 4 lety

    Excellent lesson.

  • @p4rth94
    @p4rth94 Před 9 lety

    Great Video man, really helps

  • @PAVANZYL
    @PAVANZYL Před 7 lety +1

    Thanks, nice series.

  • @giuliacoene2445
    @giuliacoene2445 Před 5 lety

    thank you so so so much this really helped me out

  • @silviaramirez7551
    @silviaramirez7551 Před rokem

    Thank you very much.

  • @hananehassouni6697
    @hananehassouni6697 Před 9 lety +1

    Thanks for the video.can you tell me the reason why you didn't abide by the binary system(branching) in the last example,kuz iw was expecting the recursion of the NP

  • @kangsuya6459
    @kangsuya6459 Před 5 lety

    Thank you very much

  • @200300646
    @200300646 Před 9 měsíci

    Just because it is a common misconception, the verb in "Boku wa niku ga suki desu" is actually "desu". "To like" in Japanese is an adjective so more like the whole phrase "suki desu" is the verb.

  • @jeremyhunter2319
    @jeremyhunter2319 Před 6 lety +4

    The issue of "ending sentences with a preposition", I understand, is due to teachers in times gone by would try and impose foreign grammar on English, particularly Latin. This resulted in rules such as "no double negatives", despite the fact that the double negative in Old English was perfectly legitimate, Latin be damned. It didn't negate itself, in fact it emphasised the negativity. People need to give up on prescriptive grammar once and for all. As long as we understand each other, that's all that matters, and when we don't, we'll work it out together.

    • @nonyabusiness9747
      @nonyabusiness9747 Před 2 lety

      The problem arrises when creating writs, notices, & affidavits. (Or being served one)

  • @pavelarroyo1621
    @pavelarroyo1621 Před 6 lety

    Excelent video

  • @user-is2qm2vp2n
    @user-is2qm2vp2n Před 7 lety

    رائع جدا
    خوش يشرح...جزاك لله خيرا

  • @nilesnow2698
    @nilesnow2698 Před 5 lety

    Suki is a noun or an adjectival noun... but I get your point

  • @seelevel5865
    @seelevel5865 Před 5 lety

    I think people are probbaly afraid to leave comments, man. LOL And, I am enjoying the instruction immensely. Thank you so much for the teaching of this subject which is so very important for those who wish to be correct.

  • @danysyna
    @danysyna Před 5 lety

    Just an observation: SUKI in Japanese isn't a verb, actually is an adjective. It's a little complicated. So if you want to change you're example, you could use: Boku wa niku wo taberu - I eat meat. (Boku wa will be the Subject, niku wo will be the direct object and taberu will be the verb).

  • @betlamed
    @betlamed Před 7 lety

    2. is actually very poetic!

  • @azforthlol
    @azforthlol Před 5 lety

    I always find it confusing about how concepts like subject and object are taken as a given. I find them some of the hardest concepts to nail down. We always introduce people to syntax with stuff like SVO. However, it completely presupposes an understanding of things like word class. It also leads lots of people to assume that subject means the same thing as agent, and it all goes fine until they hit passive constructions. Personally I think the subject-predicate distinction is the best starting point. It gives a better entry level understanding of syntax and doesn't get bogged down by being conflated with squishy semantic notions.

  • @ivantruffle1529
    @ivantruffle1529 Před 3 lety

    Hello, sir! I have questions to ask - The former question - During the course of the video, you said that the dog ran away, and away is a preposition; but also, can we refer to an adverb?
    The latter question - what is the meaning of the abbreviation of Ss at the top of the tree diagram?
    *Thank you for your great lesson!* :D

  • @mariamkinen8036
    @mariamkinen8036 Před 3 lety

    Yes. Not bad.

  • @Rina-wt8zp
    @Rina-wt8zp Před 7 lety +1

    regarding the homework example: can VP := (V , NP) to allow for transitivity, then combine with PP := (P , NP) (using a hypothetical VP := (VP , PP) rule) to establish a first-order and second-order verb phrase hierarchy wherein VP1:=(V , NP) and VP2:=(VP , PP) ???

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety +1

      At this point, it would be fine just to have a rule like VP -> V NP PP until you move into X-Bar Theory. It just may have issues dealing with ambiguities and constituency. I'd recommend the [syntax] series on my channel for more info that may help out.

  • @ttchmp
    @ttchmp Před 7 lety +1

    what about how to explain how a sentence is ungrammatical? ex. The instructor suggested the students to study. The verb phrase to study seems off, how do I explain that in linguistics terms?

    • @Andrekz9
      @Andrekz9 Před 5 lety

      Maybe I am 2 years late. English is not my first language but according to my knowledge in English language this is a particular case where you cannot use an infinitive (to play) after the verb “suggest” there’s a grammar rule that says that you can only use gerunds with certain verbs (admit, advice, avoid, deny, etc) remembering that infinitives and gerunds are used as nouns and not verbs. I think that there we are talking about syntactic rules. What is and what is not possible in language.

  • @salouaaouaf5168
    @salouaaouaf5168 Před 7 lety

    i think the senetence "i left the ball on the counter" should be analyzed using X-Bar Theory

  • @yanyanhuang8195
    @yanyanhuang8195 Před 6 lety

    hi, your videos are very explicit! But I was just wondering, why is tree diagram you draw in this video not reflecting the X-bar structure, which is often used in other textbooks? Are there any preconditions that require using one type rather than the other? thank you!

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety

      There is no need at an introduction level to jump straight into X-Bar. Students tend to find it confusing and spend more time trying to figure out how X' trees work, rather than learning about word categories, phrases, constituents, and how sentences are built. It's a much smoother transition to teach X-Bar after they've mastered the current system, since then they can focus entirely on the structure since the foundation for the rest of syntax is solid. This is just my experience though.

    • @yanyanhuang8195
      @yanyanhuang8195 Před 6 lety

      Thank you very much for your reply! Actually I am preparing an entry exam for a master program in linguistics. So, my further question would be, do you think it is acceptable to draw this kind of tree diagram instead of that with X-Bar in this regard? Thanks again for your videos, these are very helpful!

  • @jeajungful
    @jeajungful Před 7 lety +6

    Sir, I think your sentence "I left the ball on the counter" can have more than one meaning. It' means this sentence hold ambiguous internal structure. In the last of the video, I saw you put "PP" connecting with "VP". This mans you put something on the counter. But if you move the "PP" to connect with the "NP", the meaning can be changed. It means you ignored something which in on the counter. This is my opinion about your tree diagram. :)

    • @jeajungful
      @jeajungful Před 7 lety

      By the way, I think your video is very useful since it can brief my time to read the whole for the 3rd time on my textbook. Love it! Thank you so much! :)

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety +13

      Yep! Syntactic ambiguity appears everywhere.I think my favorite recent example would be "I have a craving for sushi that is so bad." Maybe the craving is bad, or maybe I'm just craving bad sushi.

    • @jeajungful
      @jeajungful Před 7 lety +1

      :)

  • @AnnabelleJARankin
    @AnnabelleJARankin Před 7 lety +3

    It is actually only in formal writing that teachers teach not to end sentences with a preposition, and it has more to do with convention than grammar. and we teach 'you and me' because you write as though the 'you and' were not there. Never taught 'you and I' in position of object. Good vid. though.

  • @TopHatKitty
    @TopHatKitty Před 7 lety +10

    Suki is not a verb though. Suki(na) is an adjective, so the literal translation in English would be "Meat is likable." Japanese verbs end with U and have conjugations that change the last U or RU sound, and Suki(na) is classified as a NA adjective.

    • @whosaysitstrue
      @whosaysitstrue Před 7 lety +2

      There are also irregular verbs.

    • @1stwhiteflash
      @1stwhiteflash Před 6 lety

      Anata wa suki desu.

    • @soraneyorumi2017
      @soraneyorumi2017 Před 6 lety

      Wa is not the right article... If you mean "I like you" the correct article is ga. If you intend to use wa, there is some information missing. Something like "Anata wa suki na hito desu" makes grammatical sense. Although I wouldn't use "suki" in this case..."yasashii"/"ii" (kind/good) sound better...Even then I'd probably use "kata" instead of "hito" in this case too...

    • @geminikutie6141987
      @geminikutie6141987 Před 6 lety +1

      There is the verb 好く.

  • @ahsanalipathan5358
    @ahsanalipathan5358 Před 7 lety

    sir tell me particular definition about linguistic?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety +3

      Linguistics is the scientific study of language.

  • @meryemraoui8995
    @meryemraoui8995 Před 8 lety

    Any idea about WH, head,np movements?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 8 lety +1

      If I ever do a full syntax course, it will be covered. Movement will show up in Mathematical Linguistics in July, though.

    • @meryemraoui8995
      @meryemraoui8995 Před 8 lety

      Okay thx for the response good luck

  • @HoanVu27121992
    @HoanVu27121992 Před 4 lety

    How can we make a tree of "It is a fishing rod"? What is "fishing" here?

  • @t.k.abrams4720
    @t.k.abrams4720 Před 6 lety

    Why was VP broken up into V and PP instead of just V and P at 11:00 in the video? How do you know when to make something NP or PP rather than just N or P?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      An N must be part of an NP. A P must be part of a PP. A V must be part of a VP. All lexical categories (N, V, P, Adj, Adv) must be part of their own respective phrases (NP, VP, PP, AdjP, AdvP), while functional categories (Deg, Aux, Conj, Det) do not (in this theory).

    • @t.k.abrams4720
      @t.k.abrams4720 Před 6 lety

      TheTrevTutor Thanks! That helps a lot.

  • @frogsaresodumbtbh1958
    @frogsaresodumbtbh1958 Před 7 lety +3

    nice desu

  • @TheWriterWalker
    @TheWriterWalker Před 6 lety

    PRESCRIPTIVE GRAMMAR: Right!

  • @evveCZ
    @evveCZ Před 8 lety

    Hi, I have a question... why is "away" (In a sentence "The dog ran away.") a preposition? I always though it's an adverb, and that "away" is a preposition only in cases such as "away from". Maybe I'm just missing a point here, but this really bothers me :) Thanks

    • @Kazorwoman
      @Kazorwoman Před 7 lety +1

      "away" is the preposition here, because it "shows where the dog ran" - not "how the dog did it" - you can usually ask "how" when you would describe a verb: I ran quickly or He spoke fast - here you could ask "how did you run?" - Quickly. "how did he speak?" Fast.

    • @lepredator189
      @lepredator189 Před 7 lety

      Kristina Rasmussen not entirely accurate... your examples of 'fast' and 'quickly' are adverbs of manner, which aren't the only kinds of adverbs in the language. 'Away' happens to be an adverb of location/place. I know I'm going all traditional grammar on this here, but that's the deal. 'Away' could mean 'away from (P) the house (NP)', a leftward expansion of an implied or deleted PP.

  • @hafsamoha2239
    @hafsamoha2239 Před 7 lety

    the predicate is the VP isn't it ?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety

      Depends on whatever the linguists default definition of "predicate" is.
      Some linguists treat "predicate" to mean the VP. (TP excluding SPEC later in linguistics)
      Other linguists treat "predicate" to mean "Fregean predicate", which is just the V.

  • @sarahals8604
    @sarahals8604 Před 6 lety

    He likes you and me is prescriptive or descriptive?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      Prescriptively fine and descriptively fine.

  • @jaysmith4302
    @jaysmith4302 Před 7 lety +1

    When you say that the high school teacher was wrong, you can't mean that in any absolute sense. If you were to write a textbook or submit a paper for academic publication, I'm sure you would write it under the burden of prescriptive grammar. Perhaps I should send you one of those T-shirts that says "GRAMMAR POLICE: TO CORRECT AND TO SERVE."

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety +6

      There is an academic style that you should adapt for writing. But, academic styles are not independent grammars. So yeah, you should probably use specific parts of "prescribed grammar" when publishing a paper.
      But I still stand by the fact that the definition of "grammar" in an English course is not the same as the definition of grammar in language.
      If someone were to write "I can't understand all ya'lls statements" in a paper, it wouldn't be labeled "ungrammatical", instead it would be labeled "y'all not acceptable in formal writing."

    • @lepredator189
      @lepredator189 Před 7 lety +1

      This kind of question becomes a sociolinguistic issue, where there are types of language acceptable in different social contexts or semantic fields.

  • @MoaazBunduk
    @MoaazBunduk Před 6 lety

    at 12:57 he said you has

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety

      "That sentence, I guarantee you, has never occured..."

  • @NicholasMonks
    @NicholasMonks Před 8 lety

    Was I the only one that heard "A Bit of Fry and Laurie" in this lesson?
    czcams.com/video/Ij1pZvv9m0g/video.html (@2:05)
    "Hold the newsreaders nose squarely, waiter, or friendly milk will countermand my trousers."

  • @baywrong
    @baywrong Před 6 lety

    i would like to point out that suki is not a verb in your japanese sentence

  • @charleytuna9567
    @charleytuna9567 Před 4 lety

    Any thoughts on the criminal act by use of ‘fraudulent conveyance of language’?
    [i.e. Parse Syntax Grammar per the use of a Mathematical Interface; curtesy of :David-Wynn: Miller. -RIP D: ]

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 4 lety

      lol I watched his video. It's a good laugh, but he has no idea what he's talking about.

    • @charleytuna9567
      @charleytuna9567 Před 4 lety

      Well, lets just look at the Syntax part, not all the other claims lol. I believe it kinda makes sense when your looking at it from a law prospective (or contracts, trust etc). It has to be precise or at least with the intent of only one possible interpretation, and from a etymological comprehension of the meaning of words.
      Can you substantiate your statement at the least? Give a little more weight being your opinion?

  • @poketube6224
    @poketube6224 Před 4 lety

    In Greek it's all the forms:
    Ο Γιάννης αγαπάει τη Μαρία SVO
    Αγαπάει, Ο Γιάννης τη Μαρία VSO
    Αγαπάει την μαρία, Ο Γιάννης VOS
    Τη Μαρία αγαπάει Ο Γιάννης OVS
    Τη Μαρία Ο Γιάννης αγαπάει OSV
    Ο Γιάννης τη Μαρία αγαπάει SOV

  • @whosaysitstrue
    @whosaysitstrue Před 7 lety

    The first Japanese example wasn't the best because suki is technically a NA adjective. If you want people to see this comment, LIKE it!!!
    A better example would be: 僕は肉を食べます。
                Boku wa(ha) niku wo tabemasu.
    SOV
    I eat meat.

  • @VerbaleMondo
    @VerbaleMondo Před 6 lety +1

    When you can speak Japanese...

  • @glenn-anthony4198
    @glenn-anthony4198 Před 5 lety

    boy hit ball S V O

  • @lepredator189
    @lepredator189 Před 7 lety

    "I got lotsa love for Iggy Azaelia's phat-ass ass!" Now, there's an intuitively grammatical sentence for ya, which happens to be true for me. Question: isn't Halliday's SFL easier enough to understand than, say, GPSG... especially coming from an L2-acquisition standpoint?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety

      I'm not familiar with Halliday's SFL at all, but there are dozens of linguistic theories that all take varying approaches. It looks like SFL is significantly more complex to incorporate cognitively though.

  • @t.k.abrams4720
    @t.k.abrams4720 Před 6 lety

    bad bad bad

  • @vivekyadav-sd8vx
    @vivekyadav-sd8vx Před 7 lety

    Thanks you so much.

  • @vivekyadav-sd8vx
    @vivekyadav-sd8vx Před 7 lety

    Thanks you so much.