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Generative Semantics

Unlike structural G, transformational G didn’t neglect the meaning of a sentence or a phrase. They couldn’t but notice that sometimes as a result of transformations grammatically correct but semantically meaningless sentences might appear. E.g. Colourless green ideas slid furiously. The attempts of grammarians to overcome such contradictory sentences gave a rise to the 2nd stage of generative G which is called generative semantics or semantic syntax. Most prominent representatives are Ch. Fielmore “The case or case”, Ch. Wallace “Meaning & the structure of language”, According to the theory of generative semantic every sentence is analyzed as a unit consisting of 2 essential levels: -semantic; -syntactic. Each of them is characterized by the structure of its own. The semantic structure of a sentence is also called the deep inner or underlining structure because it can’t be observed because it is produced by human thinking & is contained in our minds.

With the help of transformations this inner structure is materialized as a syntactic structure which exists either in oral or written form & it’s visible => it’s also called the surface structure.

Since the meaning of a sentence is produced by thinking the semantic structure of a sentence is described in logical terms. The characteristic feature of generative semantics is that the verb is treated here as the principle part of the sentence which preconditions the number & quality of all other parts of the sentence. Verbs depended on their valency are subdivided into: 1) zero-valenced verbs which don’t need any part of the sentence but can generate the sentence even taken alone, 2) Mono-valenced verbs need 1 additional part of a sentence (I speak). 3) Bi-valenced verbs need 2 additional words ( I watch TV). 4) Three-valenced verbs need 3 more words (I sent him a book) (ïðèáàâëÿåì addressee).

All the words which appear in a sentence depending on the verbal valency are called verbal cases (ãë. ïàäåæè). The word “case” here is used not in a morphological meaning but in the semantic meaning of the word. In morphology we speak about noun, pronoun & verb. Here we speak about the cases in the semantic meaning of the word & their those parts of the sentence which are preconditioned by the verbal valency. Verbs themselves depending on their most general meaning are subdivided into:

-action

-process

-state

The quality of the verbal cases depend on a type of a verb. The verbal cases may be called:

-agent which denotes a doer of an action (I speak English).

-patient which denotes a person undergoing a certain state (I am cold).

-object, it’s a thing acted upon (I write a letter)

-beneficiant, a person who gains from a certain action. (I gave him money)

-elementive, various phenomena of nature (wind, rain, snow) which can perform an action. (The wind broke the window)

-locative, denotes the place of an action.

-temporative—time

-modifier—the manner of an action (Do it easily).



Generative semantics produces very favourable grounds for contrastive study of languages. The main supposition is that various languages may have semantic structures in common because the semantic structure is produced on the level of thinking & the manner of thinking in similar with various people. But the syntactic structures into which the sentence meanings are shaped, may be different because various languages differ in their grammatical types. E.g. It is freezing—Ìîðîçèò.

In Russian this meaning is expressed by 1 member impersonal sentence. In E-sh the same meaning is expressed by a 2-member sentence which has the formal subject “it”. In Russian 1-member sentences having no subject. In E-sh—a 2-member sentence with quite definite grammatical subject.

Within 1 & the same language there may be sentences relating the same meaning but having different syntactic structure. E.g. John bought a car.

agent action object

It is John who bought a car.

We have emphatic construction which is used to emphasize the doer of an action.

Another possibility of an opposite character can be illustrated by those cases when 1 & the same syntactic structure can express the different semantic structure. E.g. The boy runs fast. The book sells well.

If we compare the semantic structures of these sentences, it’s obvious that they are different. In order to account for this homonymy of forms the representatives of generative semantics suggest that each word in a sentence should be subjected to componental analysis.

boy book

N N

common common

class class

countable countable

animate inanimate

human being thing

young --

male --

Generative semantics is the latest grammatical school which makes an attempt to set the interrelations between the human thought & formal ways of its presentation in a language. These ideas are also thoughtful with the purposes of comparison of various languages.

 


Date: 2015-12-24; view: 1276


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