Syntactic Theory LING2026  - Details

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Later Year Course


Offered By: School of Language Studies
Academic Career: Undergraduate
Course Subject: Linguistics
Offered in: Second Semester, 2010
Unit Value: 6 units
Course Description:

The course works through in detail how to construct a formal syntactic theory that can accommodate the central syntactic phenomena of a typologically diverse range of grammar.  Lexical-Functional Grammar is the theory most often developed, but certain others might be, instead.

Learning Outcomes:

On completing the course, students should have the ability to:

  1. Understand how the theory considered applies to the grammatical structure of English and a range of other languages
  2. With help, read professional literature that applies the theory considered to grammatical phenomena
  3. With guidance, apply the theory to the grammatical phenomena of an unfamiliar language
  4. Identify phenomena that might be either problematic or espcially supportive for the theory
Indicative Assessment:
  1. Three assessed problem-sets illustrating the application of theoretical ideas to concrete data (60% outcomes 1,3)
  2. A research essay, 2500-3000 words, which can either be an original investigation and analysis of some aspect of the syntax of a language, or a comparison of the way in which two different syntactic theories would handle some kind of syntactic phenomenon (40%, outcomes 2,4)
Workload:

2 lectures, 1 tutorial, plus approximately 5 hrs/week study

Areas of Interest: Linguistics and Applied Linguistics
Requisite Statement:

LING2003, Introduction to Syntax

Incompatibility:

LING2006 Generative Grammar

Prescribed Texts: A brick to be made available
Majors/Specialisations: Linguistics
Academic Contact: Dr Wayan Arka and Dr Mark Donohue