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Noam Chomsky, "Syntactic Structures", 2nd ed.

Posted By: TimMa
Noam Chomsky, "Syntactic Structures", 2nd ed.

Noam Chomsky, "Syntactic Structures", 2nd ed.
2002 | ISBN: 3110172798 | English | EPUB/PDF | 135 pages | 0.3/3.9 MB

Syntactic Structures is an influential book by American linguist Noam Chomsky, first published in 1957. Widely regarded as one of the most important texts in the field of linguistics, this work laid the foundation of Chomsky's idea of transformational grammar. The book contains the well-known example of a sentence that is completely grammatical, yet completely nonsensical in "Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.

Noam Chomsky's first book on syntactic structures is one of the first serious attempts on the part of a linguist to construct within the tradition of scientific theory-construction a comprehensive theory of language which may be understood in the same sense that a chemical, biological theory is understood by experts in those fields. It is not a mere reorganization of the data into a new kind of library catalogue, nor another specualtive philosophy about the nature of man and language, but rather a rigorus explication of our intuitions about our language in terms of an overt axiom system, the theorems derivable from it, explicit results which may be compared with new data and other intuitions, all based plainly on an overt theory of the internal structure of languages; and it may well provide an opportunity for the application of explicity measures of simplicity to decide preference of one form over another form of grammar.

Revue de presse
"Chomsky's book on syntactic structures is one of the first serious attempts on the part of a linguist to construct within the tradition of scientific theory-construction a comprehensive theory of language which may be understood in the same sense that a chemical, biological theory is ordinarily understood by experts in those fields. It is not a mere reorganization of the data into a new kind of library catalog, nor another speculative philosophy about the nature of Man and Language, but rather a rigorous explication of our intuitions about our language in terms of an overt axiom system, the theorems derivable from it, explicit results which may be compared with new data and other intuitions, all based plainly on an overt theory of the internal structure of languages; and it may well provide an opportunity for the application of explicit measures of simplicity to decide preference of one form over another form of grammar."
Robert B. Lees in: 'Language'

"I had already decided I wanted to be a linguist when I discovered this book. But it is unlikely that I would have stayed in the field without it. It has been the single most inspiring book on linguistics in my whole career."
Henk van Riemsdijk
Introduction to Second Edition by David W. Lightfoot
Preface
1. Introduction
2. The Independence of Grammar
3. An Elementary Linguistic Theory
4. Phrase Structure
5. Limitations of Phrase Structure Description
6. On the Goals of Linguistic Theory
7. Some Transformations in English
8. The Explanatory Power of Linguistic Theory
9. Syntax and Semantics
10. Summary
11. Appendix I: Notations and Terminology
12. Appendix II: Examples of English Phrase Structure and Transformational Rules
Bibliography

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