المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6586 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
تناول ثمار الأفوكادو
2025-04-12
اعرف مدى خطورة الملوثات البيئية على مخك
2025-04-12
اعتمد على الأوميجا لمقاومة تذبذب الحالة المزاجية
2025-04-12
أمثلة واقعية حول أثر الطعام على الإنسان
2025-04-12
Theoretical background of syntax of pre- and postnominal adjectives
2025-04-12
A generalization: two positions, two classes of adjectives
2025-04-12

السابقون الى الدفاع عن الحسين (عليه السلام)
7-5-2019
Radical Reactions
12-5-2017
تغذية نيماتودا النبات Feeding of plant nematodes
2025-04-11
الماء الباطني كعامل من عوامل التعرية
2024-10-13
محمود بن حمزة بن نصر الكَرماني
13-08-2015
Connes Function
10-4-2020

rule (n.)  
  
1230   06:07 مساءً   date: 2023-11-11
Author : David Crystal
Book or Source : A dictionary of linguistics and phonetics
Page and Part : 420-18


Read More
Date: 2023-06-14 1187
Date: 2023-11-27 809
Date: 24-1-2023 1723

rule (n.)

A term used in LINGUISTICS, and especially in GENERATIVE GRAMMAR, to refer to a formal statement of correspondence between linguistic ELEMENTS or STRUCTURES. In the case of generative rules, there is more involved than a set of descriptive statements summarizing one’s observations; generative rules are predictive, expressing a hypothesis about the relationships between SENTENCES which will hold for the LANGUAGE as a whole, and which reflect the NATIVE-SPEAKER’s COMPETENCE. In the classical account, a grammar is seen as a set of REWRITE RULES which will generate all and only the grammatical sentences of a language. The rules may be subclassified in terms of the COMPONENTS of the grammar in which they appear (e.g. ‘phonological rules’, ‘syntactic rules’, ‘lexical rules’).

 

Several types of rules have been recognized. The most basic types are PHRASE-STRUCTURE rules, of the form X ⇒ Y, and TRANSFORMATIONAL rules, of the form A ⇒ B, where A and B are STRINGS of structural elements. In Syntactic Structures (1957) a distinction was made between OPTIONAL and OBLIGATORY rules. Other types of rule commonly cited include RECURSIVE, GLOBAL, MOVEMENT, READJUSTMENT, VARIABLE, lexical INSERTION and lexical REDUNDANCY rules. In some later MODELS of generative grammar, the notion of a rule schema is introduced. This is a means of specifying a set of rules without having to list them individually, e.g. S ⇒ Sn , where n refers to any number of sentences (greater than 1) that can be the result of this rule (as in CO-ORDINATE sentences, which may be of any length). In GENERALIZED PHRASE-STRUCTURE GRAMMAR, reference is made to IMMEDIATE DOMINANCE rules and LINEAR PRECEDENCE rules. In GOVERNMENT-BINDING THEORY there has been a shift away from the notion of rules to that of PRINCIPLES and PARAMETERS; in OPTIMALITY THEORY to the notion of CONSTRAINTS.

 

The linguistic sense thus contrasts with the traditional use of the term, where rules are recommendations for correct usage, as in ‘a preposition is not to be used at the end of a sentence’. No PRESCRIPTIVE or PROSCRIPTIVE implication is present in the linguistic sense of ‘rule’.