Lexical functional grammar
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Lexical functional grammar (LFG) is a theoretical framework in linguistics, a variety of generative grammar. The development of the theory was initiated by Joan Bresnan and Ronald Kaplan in the 1970s, in reaction to the direction research in the area of transformational grammar had begun to take. It mainly focuses on syntax, including its relation with morphology and semantics. There has been little LFG work on phonology (although ideas from Optimality Theory have recently been popular in LFG research).
LFG views language as being made up of multiple dimensions of relations. Each of these dimensions is represented as a distinct structure with its own rules, concepts, and form. The primary ones that have figured in LFG research are:
- the representation of grammatical functions (f-structure). See feature structure.
- the structure of syntactic constituents (c-structure).
For example, in the sentence The old woman eats the falafel, the c-structure analysis is that this is a sentence which is made up of two pieces, a noun phrase (NP) and a verb phrase (VP). The VP is itself made up of two pieces, a verb (V) and another NP. The NPs are also analyzed into their parts. Finally, the bottom of the structure is the words out of which the sentence is constructed. The f-structure analysis, on the other hand, treats the sentence as being composed of functional units: a subject, a predicate, a tense, and an object.
There are other structures which are hypothesized in LFG work, although these tend to figure less prominently:
- argument structure (a-structure)
- semantic structure (s-structure)
- information structure (i-structure)
- morphological structure (m-structure)
- phonological structure (p-structure)
The various structures can be said to be mutually constraining.
The LFG conception of language differs from Chomskian theories, which have always involved separate levels of constituent structure representation being mapped onto each other via transformations. The LFG approach has had particular success with nonconfigurational languages, languages in which the relation between structure and function is less direct than it is in languages like English; for this reason LFG's adherents consider it a more plausible universal model of language.
Another feature of LFG is that grammatical-function changing operations like passivization are said to be lexical. This means that the active-passive relation, for example, is a relation between two types of verbs rather than two types of sentences. Active and passive verbs are both listed in the lexicon, and involve alternative mapping of the participants to grammatical functions.
Through the positing of productive processes in the lexicon and the separation of structure and function, LFG is able to account for syntactic patterns without the use of transformations defined over syntactic structure. For example, in a sentence like What did you see?, where what is understood as the object of see, transformational grammar puts what after see (the usual position for objects) in "deep structure" , and then moves it. LFG analyzes what as having two functions: question-focus and object. It occupies the position associated in English with the question-focus function, and the constraints of the language allow it to take on the object function as well.
A central goal in LFG research is to create a model of grammar with a depth which appeals to linguists while at the same time being efficiently parseable and having the rigidity of formalism which computational linguists require.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- Bresnan, Joan (2001). Lexical Functional Syntax. Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-20973-5
- Falk, Yehuda N. (2001). Lexical-Functional Grammar: An Introduction to Parallel Constraint-Based Syntax. CSLI. ISBN 1-57586-341-3