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Syntactic Theory: A Formal Introduction by Ivan A. Sag

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This second edition of Syntactic A Formal Introduction expands and improves upon a truly unique introductory syntax textbook. Like the first edition, its focus is on the development of precisely formulated grammars whose empirical predictions can be directly tested. There is also considerable emphasis on the prediction and evaluation of grammatical hypotheses, as well as on integrating syntactic hypotheses with matters of semantic analysis.The book covers the core areas of English syntax from the last quarter century, including complementation, control, "raising constructions," passives, the auxiliary system, and the analysis of long distance dependency constructions. Syntactic Theory's step-by-step introduction to a consistent grammar in these core areas is complemented by extensive problem sets drawing from a variety of languages.The book's theoretical perspective is presented in the context of current models of language processing, and the practical value of the constraint-based, lexicalist grammatical architecture proposed has already been demonstrated in computer language processing applications. This thoroughly reworked second edition includes revised and extended problem sets, updated analyses, additional examples, and more detailed exposition throughout.Praise for the first "Syntactic Theory sets a new standard for introductory syntax volumes that all future books should be measured against."—Gert Webelhuth, Journal of Linguistics

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First published April 1, 2003

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Ivan A. Sag

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Ushan.
801 reviews77 followers
May 29, 2015
This is a textbook of syntax used at Stanford University and at the University of Washington, where the authors teach; it is based on a flavor of generative grammar called Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar. Ever since the ancient Greeks, words in a language have been assigned to syntactic categories: nouns, verbs, adjectives and so on; phrases also belong to categories: "my hovercraft" is a noun phrase, "full of eels" is an adjectival phrase, "is full of eels" is a verb phrase, and "my hovercraft is full of eels" is a sentence. This grammar realizes that this is not enough: categories must have internal structure. The types are Boolean (a verb is either auxiliary or not), enumerated (a personal pronoun is first-, second- or third-person), an ordered list (in "Bill Gates gave the library a million bucks", "gave" has a list of two objects, "the library" and "a million bucks"), or a set of key-value pairs where the values are either primitive types or other sets of key-value pairs. Sometimes two elements are required to be the same in Prologesque unification: in French the gender and number of the noun and its modifier adjectives must agree. The grammar also allows transformations that transform valid phrases into other valid phrases; "Bill Gates gave the library a million bucks" becomes "Bill Gates gave a million bucks to the library" becomes "A million bucks were given to the library by Bill Gates". A topic that was new to me is raising and control: English has subject-raising verbs ("Bill Gates seems rich" = "It seems that Bill Gates is rich"), object-raising verbs ("I expect Bill Gates to be rich" = "I expect that Bill Gates is rich"), subject-control verbs ("I want to be rich" = "I want it to be so that I am rich") and object-control verbs ("I persuaded Bill Gates to found a company" = "I persuaded Bill Gates to make it so that Bill Gates founds a company"); their internal structure is such that they transform differently from other verbs. This book gradually builds up a grammar of a significant subset of English to be ever more complicated; it touches on such topics as the expletive it and there ("It is raining"), gaps ("Bill is easy to work with" = "It is easy to work with Bill") and even verbless sentences in African American Vernacular English ("[I voted for Barack Obama because] he black"). There are exercises that mention other languages, including an Australian Aboriginal one and a Salvadorean Indian one, but the emphasis is on English.
Profile Image for Othman.
277 reviews16 followers
November 30, 2018
the book is not bad, but unless you're a computational linguist or someone whose life has no value whatsoever, why the hell would you wanna waste your time on HPSG? I mean,,, C'mon
Profile Image for Robert Muller.
AuthorÌý15 books31 followers
August 17, 2013
If you want to be up-to-date on modern linguistics theory, or if you want to explore a modern analysis of the syntax of the English language, this is the book. It brings together a lot of work done in linguistics from the 1980s on. It is also the basis for a good deal of work in natural language processing in computer science and machine learning. As a computer scientist I find it interesting that they cite very little literature on the development of the type model they use (essentially the object oriented model with abstraction and inheritance emphasized), which goes back all the way to Sowa in the 1970s (and obviously has roots going all the way back to Aristotle). I would not use this book to understand the philosophy or history of the approach, it's more of a manual on how to use it. As such, it is clear, concise, and well written, with excellent exercises and summaries. Don't forget to read Chapter 16, the last chapter, which points toward future developments. Spoiler alert: they are basically unifying syntactic theory (Chomsky et al.) with Semiotics (Saussure , Eco, et al.) in a theory of signs. And, as a computer scientist again, the impact of this on the design of the syntactic type structure is huge, making it much more simple and straightforward and an excellent basis for NLP.
Profile Image for Justin.
37 reviews11 followers
July 14, 2017
This is the textbook used to teach syntax courses in head-driven phrase structure grammar (HPSG). It provides a solid introduction to the topic and has a lengthy appendix that provides a useful reference.

Since there isn't much of a plot summary I can give, I'll just let this review "divulge" a little joke on the cover. On the bottom right portion of the cover, there's an image of four people. Although it's hard to make out, this image is supposed to show the three authors (Sag, Wasow, and Bender) being introduced to each other by the publisher. They're all dressed in formal clothes; hence, the subtitle of the book, "A Formal Introduction". This is a little bit clearer in the first edition of the book, which had this image larger and didn't include Bender as the book was just authored by Sag and Wasow back then. Apparently, the position of the people in this image was supposed to reflect a syntax tree.
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