syntax hw stuff
Jan. 26th, 2005 12:14 pm"I've just eaten the last piece of chocolate cake."
Identify the main parts of speech in the following sentences. Treat hyphenated words as single words.
What is the syntactic category of "I've" - or do I need to split it into "I have"?
***
( And then there's the infamous Jabberwocky: )
For each underlined word, indicate its part of speech, and explain the distributional criteria by which you came up with that classification. You will need to figure out what part of speech they are based upon what suffixes and prefixes they take, along with where they appear relative to other words.
outgrabe: I assume this is a noun, as in "the borogoves were mimsy, and so were the outgrabe", but it could also be a verb...
were: How do I show, distributionally, that this is a verb?
Jubjib and Tumtum are adjectives, right?
whiffling: Is this a verb or an adverb modifying "came"?
***
a) Mamu:k-ma qu:?as-?i.
working-PRES man-DEF
"The man is working."
b) Qu:?as-ma mamu:k-?i.
man-PRES working-DEF
"The working one is a man.
In this problem I have to say whether mamu:k and qu:?as are verbs or nouns in each sentence. Is a word being modified by a tense (auxilliary) universally enough to consider a word as verb?
Identify the main parts of speech in the following sentences. Treat hyphenated words as single words.
What is the syntactic category of "I've" - or do I need to split it into "I have"?
( And then there's the infamous Jabberwocky: )
For each underlined word, indicate its part of speech, and explain the distributional criteria by which you came up with that classification. You will need to figure out what part of speech they are based upon what suffixes and prefixes they take, along with where they appear relative to other words.
outgrabe: I assume this is a noun, as in "the borogoves were mimsy, and so were the outgrabe", but it could also be a verb...
were: How do I show, distributionally, that this is a verb?
Jubjib and Tumtum are adjectives, right?
whiffling: Is this a verb or an adverb modifying "came"?
a) Mamu:k-ma qu:?as-?i.
working-PRES man-DEF
"The man is working."
b) Qu:?as-ma mamu:k-?i.
man-PRES working-DEF
"The working one is a man.
In this problem I have to say whether mamu:k and qu:?as are verbs or nouns in each sentence. Is a word being modified by a tense (auxilliary) universally enough to consider a word as verb?