Linguistics 522
Introduction to Syntax
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Course Description |
| Goals |
The primary goal of the course is to acquaint students with the basic goals and methodlogy of syntactic theory, in the process giving them an introduction to one very influential approach. |
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| Practice |
The course will use the textbook Syntax: A Generative Introduction, by Andrew Carnie, available in the campus bookstore. There will be exercises for most of the chapters covered. Please be sure to get the Second Edition. The course begins with an introduction to constituents and trees, introduces some structural concepts such as dominance and C-Command, and then develops some applications such as the Binding Theory, and some theoretical hypotheses, such as X-Bar Theory. The meat of the course is then a treatment of movement of various kinds, including head movement and NP movement. A virtue of the text is that examples and exercises from numerous languages are used, affording the student the opprotunity to evaluate some of the claims made about the universality of the theory. |
| Pre-requisites | Linguistics 101 or equivalent. |
| Grading |
Grading will be based on exercises and
take-home midterms and finals.
If you make a positive assertion about the language, you must give an example of the kind of form you claim occurs. The English progressive is formed using the verb "to be" combined with an "-ing" form of the verb.
(ii) John was having beef stroganoff for dinner. |
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Late Assignments |
The general structure of the course is not well-suited to
late assignments. Assignment solutions will be discussed
in detail on the day they are turned in, and thus students
who turn assignments in late will be at an advantage.
However, to allow for some
flexibility, late assignments will receive partial
credit. Here is the lateness policy:
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| Group Work |
Group work is encouraged on the assignments. The midterm and final should be completed without any help. When turning in collaborative assignments, your collaborators should be identified on your paper. One suggestion about group work:
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| Attendance |
Attendance is not a formal part of your grade. However, be aware that participation is, and participation is always easier when you are there. Also, hints on how to solve problems on the assignments, the midterms, and the final are handed out liberally in class. These hints will not be posted on the web page. |
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Office Hours |
TuTh 10:00-11:00, Tu 18:00-19:00, Th 12:30-1:45 BAM 321
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Weekly Syllabus |
Mailing address:
Department of Linguistics and Oriental Languages
San Diego State University
5500 Campanile Drive
San Diego, CA 92182-7727
Telephone: (619) 594-0252
Office location: BAM, room 321
Office hours: TuTh 12:30-1:00, Tu 6:00-7:00, TuTh 10:00-11:00