How do we show possession in our syntax? And what does that tell us about representing nouns in our trees? In this week's episode, we take a look at determiner phrases: why we need them on top of noun phrases, how they turn some of our ideas about syntax inside out, and what they let us display in trees that we couldn't before.
This is Topic #79!
This week's tag language: Danish!
Related episodes:
What's the Structure Beneath a Sentence? X' Theory - • Syntactic Trees and X'...
What Makes a Basic Sentence? A History of Clauses - • What Makes a Basic Sen...
Last episode:
What Do You Start with in a Third Language? L3 Acquisition - • What Do You Start with...
Other of our syntax videos:
Where Do Subjects Start Off in Sentences? The VP Internal Subject Hypothesis - • Where Do Subjects Star...
What Questions Can't We Ask? Syntactic Islands - • What Questions Can't W...
What Changes in a Sentence When We Swap Verbs? Raising vs. Control Verbs - • What Changes in a Sent...
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Sources:
Much of the inspiration for the episode comes from Andrew McIntyre's mini syntax textbook: www.angl.hu-berlin.de/departm...
The DP hypothesis itself is usually attributed to Steven Abney's 1987 MIT thesis 'The English Noun Phrase and its Sentential Aspect' (www.ai.mit.edu/projects/dm/the... or www.vinartus.net/spa/87a.pdf)
The Dutch example came from this paper here: the Dutch example, there's this chapter isites.harvard.edu/fs/docs/icb....
See you all in two weeks!
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