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Grammaticality

In linguistics, grammaticality is determined by the conformity to language usage as derived by the grammar of a particular speech variety. The notion of grammaticality rose alongside the theory of generative grammar, the goal of which is to formulate rules that define well-formed, grammatical, sentences. These rules of grammaticality also provide explanations of ill-formed, ungrammatical sentences.[1][2]

In theoretical linguistics, a speaker's judgement on the well-formedness of a linguistic 'string'—called a grammaticality judgement—is based on whether the sentence is interpreted in accordance with the rules and constraints of the relevant grammar. If the rules and constraints of the particular lect are followed, then the sentence is judged to be grammatical.[3] In contrast, an ungrammatical sentence is one that violates the rules of the given language variety.

Linguists use grammaticality judgements to investigate the syntactic structure of sentences. Generative linguists are largely of the opinion that for native speakers of natural languages, grammaticality is a matter of linguistic intuition, and reflects the innate linguistic competence of speakers. Therefore, generative linguists attempt to predict grammaticality judgements exhaustively.

Grammaticality judgements are largely based on an individual's linguistic intuition, and it has been pointed out that humans have the ability to understand as well as produce an infinitely large number of new sentences that have never been seen before.[4] This allows us to accurately judge a sentence as grammatical or ungrammatical, even if it is a completely novel sentence.

Background edit

Criteria that determine grammaticality edit

According to Chomsky, a speaker's grammaticality judgement is based on two factors:

  1. A native speaker's linguistic competence, which is the knowledge that they have of their language, allows them to easily judge whether a sentence is grammatical or ungrammatical based on intuitive introspection. For this reason, such judgements are sometimes called introspective grammaticality judgements.
  2. The context in which the sentence was uttered.

Criteria that do not determine grammaticality edit

In his study of grammaticality in the 1950s, Chomsky identified three criteria which cannot be used to determine whether a sentence is grammatical:[5]

  1. Whether the sentence is included in a corpus,
  2. Whether the sentence is meaningful,
  3. Whether the sentence is statistically probable.

To illustrate this point, Chomsky created the nonsensical sentence in (1), which does not occur in any corpus, is not meaningful, and is not statistically probable. However, the form of this sentence is judged to be grammatical by many native speakers of English. Such grammaticality judgements reflect the fact that the structure of sentence (1) obeys the rules of English grammar. This can be seen by comparing sentence (1) with sentence (2). Both sentences have the same structure, and both are grammatically well-formed.

(1) Colorless green ideas sleep furiously. (Chomsky 1957: 17) (2) Harmless young children sleep quietly. 

Sentence (1) is grammatical yet infelicitous, because the pragmatics of the verb 'sleep' cannot be expressed as an action carried out in a furious manner. Hence, a native speaker would rate this sentence as odd, or unacceptable, because the meaning does not make sense according to the English lexicon.[6]

 
Tree structure of the sentence "Colourless green ideas sleep furiously."

Thus, for Chomsky a grammatical string is not necessarily a meaningful one. However, speakers can understand nonsensical strings by means of natural intonation. In addition, non-meaningful but grammatical sentences are often recalled more easily than ungrammatical sentences.[7]

Grammaticality versus acceptability edit

When Chomsky introduced the concept of grammaticality, he also introduced the concept of acceptability. Chomsky has emphasized that "the notion of 'acceptable' is not to be confused with 'grammatical.'"[3]

For linguists such as Hopper,[8] who stress the role of social learning in contrast to innate knowledge of language, there has been a gradual abandonment of talk about grammaticality in favour of acceptability.

Acceptability is:[7][6]

  1. A sentence that is consciously considered acceptable by both the speaker and hearer,
  2. A natural, appropriate, and meaningful sentence within a context,
  3. Related to a speaker's performance, and based on how a language would actually be used in a real situation,
  4. Speaker-oriented, depending on what speakers consider appropriate.

On the other hand, grammaticality is:[7][6]

  1. A linguistic ‘string’ that follows a set of given rules,
  2. A grammatical utterance that is not necessarily meaningful,
  3. Based on a native speaker's competence or knowledge of a language,
  4. Defined by the possible outputs a particular grammar can generate.

In experiments, grammaticality and acceptability are often confused, but speakers may be asked to give their 'grammatical judgments' instead of 'acceptability judgments'. The general assumption is that a native speaker's grammar produces grammatical strings and that the speaker can also judge whether the strings are acceptable in their language.[7]

Gradience in acceptability edit

The traditional categorical interpretation of grammaticality is that a sentence is either grammatical or ungrammatical. Many modern linguists, including Sprouse,[9] support this idea.

Acceptability judgments, on the other hand, fall in a continuous spectrum.[9][7] Sentences may either be clearly acceptable or clearly unacceptable, but there are also sentences that are partially acceptable. Hence, according to Sprouse, the difference between grammaticality and acceptability is that grammatical knowledge is categorical, but acceptability is a gradient scale.[9]

Linguists may use words, numbers, or typographical symbols such as question marks (?) or asterisks (*) to represent the judged acceptability of a linguistic string. During a judgment task, the speaker may report the acceptability of a sentence as acceptable, marginally acceptable, unacceptable, terrible, good, etc. Degrees of acceptability can also be represented by symbols such as ?, ??, *, **, or on a scale of 0-?-*-**, with 0 being acceptable and ** being unacceptable.[10] On a seven-point scale, speakers can rate sentences from 1 (least acceptable) to 7 (most acceptable).[11]

(3) *** The Sally hugged him the Thomas (4) ** The Sally hugged him Thomas (5) * The Sally hugged Thomas (6) ??? Which the friend Thomas has painted a picture of? (7) ?? Which friend Thomas had painted a picture of? (8) ? Which friend has Thomas painted the picture of? 

Note that examples (3)-(8) are open to interpretation as judgement is based entirely on intuition, and determination of grammaticality is dependent on one's theory of what the grammar is. Therefore, different individuals may assign the same sentence different degrees of acceptability. Some linguists believe that the informal use of these symbols is problematic because the exact meaning of the symbols have never been properly defined, and their usage is riddled with inconsistencies.[12][13][14]

Frequency affects acceptability edit

Acceptability is about the actual use of a speaker's language in concrete situations. Since it is speaker-oriented, it is possible to find instances of sentences that are assumed to be acceptable but ungrammatical.[6]

(9) But if this ever-changing world in which we live in

— Paul McCartney, Live and Let Die, 1973

Example (9) is ungrammatical, because the preposition in is copied. The rules of English prepositions only allow sentences such as (10a) and (10b), which show preposition pied-piping structure in (10a), and preposition stranding structure in (10b).[15] Sentences (9) and (11c) are ungrammatical but acceptable because of the frequency with which people hear the structure.[6]

(10) a. This world [in which] we live [ __ ] ... b. This world [which] we live in [ __ ] ... c. *This world [in which] we live in [ __ ] ... 

Although (10c) is acceptable due to a frequency affect, sentences with preposition copying are judged to be ungrammatical, as shown in (11c).

(11) a. This table [on which] I put the book [ __ ] ... b. This table [which] I put the book on [ __ ] ... c. *This table [on which] I put the book on [ __ ] ... 

Other factors that determine acceptability edit

The prevailing models on grammaticality since Chomsky postulated that the acceptability of sentences is a scale, with clearly acceptable on one side, clearly unacceptable on the other, and all manner of ranges of partial acceptability in between. To explain the scale of partial acceptability, linguists have said that phenomena other than grammatical knowledge—such as semantic plausibility, working memory limitations, etc.—account for speakers reporting acceptability on a scale. However, there are a few exceptions to this trend, including those who claim that "strength of violation" plays a role in grammaticality judgements. Examples of linguists[16] of this persuasion include Huang's[17] proposal that ECP violations are stronger than Subjacency violations, Chomsky's[18] proposal that each barrier crossed leads to lower acceptability, and Optimality Theory (esp. Keller).[19][20]

(12) Subjacency *[CP Whatj does [ TP Sue wonder [CP when I broke ___j]]]? (Sportiche 2014: 287) (13) Barrier *Herselfj likes Maryj's mother 

Subjacency says that you cannot relate two positions across two bounding nodes. In (12), we see that the movement of the wh-expression 'what' was moved past a Complementizer Phrase (CP) and a Tense Phrase (TP) to get to the specifier position of CP, thus this phrase is ungrammatical.

Within the past twenty years however, there has been a major shift in linguists' understanding of intermediate levels of acceptability. This is due to the increasing use of experimental methods to measure acceptability, making it possible to detect subtle differences along a scale of acceptability.[19]

Norm-based evaluation edit

Prescriptive grammar of controlled natural languages defines grammaticality as a matter of explicit consensus. On this view, to consider a string as grammatical, it should conform with a set of norms. These norms are usually based on conventional rules that form a part of a higher or literary register for a given language. For some languages, a group of experts are appointed to define and regularly update these rules.[7]

Use of grammaticality judgments edit

Research methods of sentence processing edit

There are several methods that successfully investigate sentence processing, some of which include eye tracking, self-paced listening and reading, or cross-modal priming. The most productive method however, is real-time grammaticality judgements. A grammaticality judgement is a test which involves showing participants sentences that are either grammatical or ungrammatical. The participant must decide whether or not they find the sentences to be grammatical as quickly as possible. Grammaticality is cross-linguistic, so this method has therefore been used on a wide variety of languages.[21]

Computer-assisted language instruction edit

Catt[22] and Catt & Hirst[23] created a model of grammaticality based around a computer program developed for computer-assisted language instruction which was designed to perform automatic error diagnosis and correction of ungrammaticalities produced by second-language learners. The program classified errors made by language-learners in their sentences as being due to errors in phrase structure, transformations, morphology, verb subcategorization, or by the languages-learners translating their primary language directly into the language they are learning. The program worked primarily by utilizing a parser which consisted of constraints which, if a first parsing attempt failed, could be selectively relaxed. Thus, for a given parse, the constraints which were relaxed indicated the precise nature and location of ungrammaticality.[14]

Assessing first language (L1) competence edit

There have been experiments conducted in order to test how early speakers gain the ability to judge grammaticality in their native language. In an experiment by Cairns et al., preschool children aged 4–6 were presented sentences such as (14) and (15) orally. (To make sure that the meaning of the sentences was clear to the children, sentences were enacted with toys.) While sentence (14) is well-formed in the adult grammar, sentence (15) is not, as indicated by the asterisk (*). The source of the ill-formedness is that the verb hug is a transitive verb and so must have a direct object, namely something or someone who receives the action of the verb. Sentence (15) is missing the receiver of hug.

(14) The kitten hugged the pig. [Carin 2006: 215] (15) *The zebra hugged. [Carin 2006: 215] 

The results of this study show that the earliest age at which children can discriminate well-formed from ill-formed sentences, as well as correct these, is at 6 years.[24] During the critical period between 4 and 6 years old, there is a significant increase in the accuracy of grammaticality judgments, since metalinguistic skill is in critical development; the judgment relies on the psycholinguistic ability of the child to access their internalized grammar and to compute whether it can or cannot generate the target sentence.[24] This ability to judge the grammaticality of sentences seems to develop in children well after basic grammar skills have been established, and is related to early reading acquisition—acquisitionists generally believe that the ability to make grammaticality judgments is a measure of syntactic awareness.[24]

Assessing second language (L2) competence edit

Grammaticality judgment tasks can also be used to assess the competence of language learners. Late learners of L2 perform worse on grammaticality judgment tasks or tests than native speakers or early acquirers, in that L2 learners are more likely to accept a sentence that is ungrammatical as grammatical. After the critical period, age of acquisition is no longer supposed to have an effect, and native-like performance is no longer supposed to be achievable. However, the idea that there is a critical period for the acquisition of syntactic competence, which is reflected by the ability to assess the well-formedness of a sentence, is controversial. On one view, biological or language-specific mechanisms become nonfunctional after a certain age. On another view, decreased L2 learning ability with age is not inevitable, and can be explained by factors such as motivation, learning environment, pressure, and time commitment. Although there is evidence that supports the claim that speakers outside the L2 mastery age range are not capable of acquiring native-like mastery of a language, there is also evidence supporting the opposite, as well as evidence for young learners not mastering an L2.[25]

Performance-related factors edit

General processing problems, rather than a deficit in some syntax specific process or module, offer a viable explanation for populations that exhibit poor grammatical performance. Performance on L2 grammaticality judgments might be partially due to variable accessibility to and use of relevant grammatical knowledge. Difficulties in basic level cognitive processing are due to:

  • low L2 memory capacity
  • poor L2 decoding ability
  • slow L2 processing speed

These issues have been tied to grammatical processing performance by testing native speakers of English on the same tasks under stressful conditions: there is shown to be difficulty in grammatical agreement when memory capacity is curtailed, important cues in the language when given noisy input, and processing important structures when not given enough time to process input. This shows that knowledge cannot always be automatically and consistently applied under stressful situations without having processing difficulties. However, these issues are not necessarily independent of each other, as low decoding ability of structure could affect processing speed. Overall, individual differences in L2 working memory and decoding ability are correlated to grammaticality judgment accuracy and latencies. However, there is no correlation between speed of processing measure and grammaticality judgment performance, age of arrival correlates with syntactic mastery, and knowledge of vocabulary probably drives grammaticality performance.[26][27]

Age-related factors edit

Age for decrease of L2 grammaticality performance varies from early childhood to late adolescence, depending on the combinations of the speaker's first and second language. The age of acquisition at which L2 learners are worse than native speakers depends on how dissimilar the L1 and L2 are on phonological and grammatical level. For example, Chinese/English bilinguals at 7 years old perform just as well as Spanish/English bilinguals at 16 years old.[28][29] This is due to the fact that a grammatical construction on an L2 that has a parallel structure in an L1 would impose less processing demand than one that does not have a parallel, causing a poorer performance on language structure.

There is evidence for late L2 learners generally having issues with plurals and past tense, and not so many issues with Subject-Verb-Object testing, in which they show native-like results; there is better performance on Yes/No as well as Wh- questions than on articles and past tense.[26]

There is data supporting high-performing late learners well beyond the critical period: in an experiment testing grammaticality by J. L. McDonald, 7 out of 50 L2 English late-learner subjects had scores within range of native speakers.[26] The results are linked to how individual differences in L2 memory capacity, decoding, or processing speed affect processing resources to automatically apply the relevant grammatical knowledge.

Reliability of L2 grammaticality judgments edit

The matter of reliability of L2 grammaticality judgments is an ongoing issue in the research field of second language acquisition. Undeniably, the case of second-language judgments involves participants to make judgments concerning their knowledge of a language system that is not necessarily complete compared to the knowledge of their first language. In an experiment, participants may encounter sentences beyond their current knowledge, resulting in guesswork. To minimize guessing, it is up to the linguists and researchers to select sentences that would better reflect a learner's knowledge of L2.[30]

Confounding factors in grammaticality judgements edit

Subject-related factors edit

Handedness edit

Studies have been conducted which explored the degree to which left or right handedness plays a role in idiolectal variation of grammaticality judgements, and have found that those with left-handed immediate family members, also referred to as familial sinistrality, perform differently than participants with only right handed family members.[31][32] They suggest that those with familial sinistrality are less sensitive to violations of sentence structure likely due to a correlation between this group and a less localized language module in the brain.[32] Cowart [31] conducted a study specifically testing for the effects of familial sinistrality in grammatical judgement tasks. Using a 4-point scale, the experiment asked participants to judge sentences that followed the following model:

(17) a. What did the scientist criticize Max's proof of? b. What did the scientist criticize a proof of? c. What did the scientist criticize the proof of? d. Why did the scientist criticize Max's proof of the theorem? 

Examples (17a-c) are structural violations, (17a) violates the Specified Subject Condition, and (17b-c) violate Subjacency, while (17d) is a grammatical control sentence. It was found that since the violations were structural in nature, participants with familial sinistrality were less sensitive to violations in such as the ones found(17a-c) while (17d) showed no variation between participant groups. In a similar study Bever, Carrithers, & Townsend[32] found evidence that support Cowart's findings, also showing that no judgement differences were found when comparing groups across variables such as age, sex, and verbal SAT score.

Task-related factors edit

Repetition edit

There have been numerous studies addressing the effect of repetition on grammaticality judgements in experimental contexts.[4][33][34] Repetition experiments are conducted by asking participants to give scaled ratings of sentences on their level of grammaticality. In the first phase, sentences are rated one at a time as a baseline measure of grammaticality level. In the repetition phase, participants rate each sentence after it has been displayed numerous times continuously, with short pauses between each repetition. They have generally found that repetition of a string significantly decreases participants grammaticality ratings of both grammatical and ungrammatical sentences.[4][33] Two possible factors have been speculated to cause this affect,[14] the first attributes this phenomenon to satiation, the phenomenon of prolonged repetition leading to illusory changes in perception. The second is that changes in participants’ judgement process occurred as a result of repetitions. Repetition effects have been shown to not be present when sentences are displayed along with a preceding sentence to give the string context.[33]

Yes/no responses edit

When researchers interpret a yes/no response on grammaticality, they need to take into account of what the participants are responding to. The speaker could be rejecting the sentence for reasons other than its grammaticality, including the context or meaning of the sentence, a particular word choice, or other factors. For example, consider this ungrammatical sentence:[35]

(16) The elephant are jumping. 

A participant, whether an adult or a child, may reject this sentence because elephants do not jump. To avoid this misinterpretation, researchers need to clarify with the participants regarding the meaning of yes and no responses.[35]

Grammaticality illusion edit

Studies have shown that when native speakers judge ungrammatical sentences to be more acceptable than their grammatical counterpart, grammaticality illusion has occurred.[36][37] Consider Frazier's example:[38]

(18) The apartment that the maid who the service had sent over was cleaning every week was well decorated. (19) *The apartment that the maid who the service had sent over was well decorated. 

The English grammar allows structures such as sentence (18), while sentence (19) is not allowed. Notice that sentence (19) is missing the verb phrase "was cleaning every week."

In several studies,[39][40] participants carried out offline and online tasks. In the offline task,[39] the participants rated their comprehension of sentences on a five-point scale in a questionnaire. The result revealed that the ungrammatical sentences were rated as good as or even better than grammatical sentences.

In the online study,[40] participants did a self-paced reading (SPR) task. The sentence appears on a computer monitor word-by-word. After each word, participants were asked to choose if the sentence is still grammatical so far. Then they would go on to rate the sentence from 1 "perfectly good English" to 7 "really bad English." The result showed that ungrammatical sentences were rated to be better than the grammatical ones.

Cross-linguistic differences edit

To find out if grammaticality illusion also occurs in other languages, linguists have carried out similar experiments with different languages.[36][37]

Vasishth[37] hypothesized that different word order could be a factor of grammaticality illusion. English sentences follow the order of subject, verb, object (SVO) while both German and Dutch have the subject, object, verb (SOV) order. Based on the results, German and Dutch participants do not show the effect of the illusion. However, if they were shown the sentences in English, they also show the illusion.

Examples of grammatical and ungrammatical sentences in German:[36]

(20) Der Anwalt, den der Zeuge, den der Spion betrachtete, schnitt, überzeugte den Richter. (21) *Der Anwalt, den der Zeuge, den der Spion betrachtete, überzeugte den Richter. 

Sentence (20) is grammatical, whereas sentence (21) is ungrammatical.

Possible causes edit

Gibson and Thomas[39] concludes from their offline acceptability ratings that working-memory overload causes native speakers to prefer the ungrammatical sentence. The shorter, ungrammatical sentences were easier to process and made more sense. The grammatical sentence with several embedded clauses, such as "was cleaning every week", may require high-memory load, making it difficult for the participants to comprehend the sentence.

Studies of grammaticality illusion in other languages such as Dutch and German[37] suggest that different language structures prevent participants from making incorrect judgments. For example, a three-verb sequence in subordinate clauses is more common in German or Dutch than in English. As a result, German or Dutch participants are well able to correctly rule out the ungrammatical sentences with the missing verb phrase.

See also edit

References edit

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  40. ^ a b Christiansen, Morten H.; MacDonald, Maryellen C. (2009). "A Usage-Based Approach to Recursion in Sentence Processing". Language Learning. 59 (s1): 126–161. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9922.2009.00538.x. ISSN 1467-9922.

Further reading edit

  • Bader, M.; Haussler, J. (2010). "Toward a model of grammaticality judgments. Journal of Linguistics, 46(2), 273-330*Nagata, H. (1988). The relativity of linguistic intuition: The effect of repetition on grammaticality judgments". Journal of Psycholinguistic Research. 17 (1): 1–17.
  • Bross, F. (2019): Acceptability Ratings in Linguistics: A Practical Guide to Grammaticality Judgments, Data Collection, and Statistical Analysis. Version 1.0. Mimeo.
  • Cairns, H.; Schlisselberg, G.; Waltzman, D.; McDaniel, D. (2006). "Development of a metalinguistic skill: judging the grammaticality of sentences". Communication Disorders Quarterly. 27 (4): 213–220. doi:10.1177/15257401060270040401. S2CID 146193377.
  • Champman, Siobhan, and Routledge, Christoper. (2009). Key ideas in Linguistics and the Philosophy of Language. Edinburgh, GBR: Edinburgh University Press.
  • Chomsky, (1957): "Syntactic Structures", The Hague/Paris:Mouton
  • Fetzer, A. (2004). Recontextualizing context: Grammaticality meets appropriateness. Philadelphia; Amsterdam: John Benjamins Pub.
  • Hopper, Paul (1987): Emergent grammar. In: Aske, Jon et al. (ed.) (1987): General session and parasession on grammar and cognition. Proceedings of the thirteenth annual meeting. Berkeley: BLS: 139–155.
  • Kail, M.; Lemaire, P.; Lecacheur, M. (2012). "Online grammaticality judgments in french young and older adults". Experimental Aging Research. 38 (2): 186–207. doi:10.1080/0361073x.2012.660031. PMID 22404540. S2CID 8675735.
  • Schütze, C. T. (2016). The empirical base of linguistics: Grammaticality judgments and linguistic methodology. Language Science Press.
  • Sportiche. D., Koopman. H., Stabler. E. (2014) An introduction to Syntactic Analysis and Theory. Wiley Balckwell.
  • Sprouse, J (2007). "Continuous acceptability, categorical grammaticality, and experimental syntax". Biolinguistics. 1: 123–134. doi:10.5964/bioling.8597. S2CID 13058743.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of grammaticality at Wiktionary

grammaticality, linguistics, grammaticality, determined, conformity, language, usage, derived, grammar, particular, speech, variety, notion, grammaticality, rose, alongside, theory, generative, grammar, goal, which, formulate, rules, that, define, well, formed. In linguistics grammaticality is determined by the conformity to language usage as derived by the grammar of a particular speech variety The notion of grammaticality rose alongside the theory of generative grammar the goal of which is to formulate rules that define well formed grammatical sentences These rules of grammaticality also provide explanations of ill formed ungrammatical sentences 1 2 In theoretical linguistics a speaker s judgement on the well formedness of a linguistic string called a grammaticality judgement is based on whether the sentence is interpreted in accordance with the rules and constraints of the relevant grammar If the rules and constraints of the particular lect are followed then the sentence is judged to be grammatical 3 In contrast an ungrammatical sentence is one that violates the rules of the given language variety Linguists use grammaticality judgements to investigate the syntactic structure of sentences Generative linguists are largely of the opinion that for native speakers of natural languages grammaticality is a matter of linguistic intuition and reflects the innate linguistic competence of speakers Therefore generative linguists attempt to predict grammaticality judgements exhaustively Grammaticality judgements are largely based on an individual s linguistic intuition and it has been pointed out that humans have the ability to understand as well as produce an infinitely large number of new sentences that have never been seen before 4 This allows us to accurately judge a sentence as grammatical or ungrammatical even if it is a completely novel sentence Contents 1 Background 1 1 Criteria that determine grammaticality 1 2 Criteria that do not determine grammaticality 2 Grammaticality versus acceptability 2 1 Gradience in acceptability 2 2 Frequency affects acceptability 2 3 Other factors that determine acceptability 2 4 Norm based evaluation 3 Use of grammaticality judgments 3 1 Research methods of sentence processing 3 2 Computer assisted language instruction 3 3 Assessing first language L1 competence 3 4 Assessing second language L2 competence 3 4 1 Performance related factors 3 4 2 Age related factors 3 4 3 Reliability of L2 grammaticality judgments 4 Confounding factors in grammaticality judgements 4 1 Subject related factors 4 1 1 Handedness 4 2 Task related factors 4 2 1 Repetition 4 2 2 Yes no responses 5 Grammaticality illusion 5 1 Cross linguistic differences 5 2 Possible causes 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground editCriteria that determine grammaticality edit According to Chomsky a speaker s grammaticality judgement is based on two factors A native speaker s linguistic competence which is the knowledge that they have of their language allows them to easily judge whether a sentence is grammatical or ungrammatical based on intuitive introspection For this reason such judgements are sometimes called introspective grammaticality judgements The context in which the sentence was uttered Criteria that do not determine grammaticality edit In his study of grammaticality in the 1950s Chomsky identified three criteria which cannot be used to determine whether a sentence is grammatical 5 Whether the sentence is included in a corpus Whether the sentence is meaningful Whether the sentence is statistically probable To illustrate this point Chomsky created the nonsensical sentence in 1 which does not occur in any corpus is not meaningful and is not statistically probable However the form of this sentence is judged to be grammatical by many native speakers of English Such grammaticality judgements reflect the fact that the structure of sentence 1 obeys the rules of English grammar This can be seen by comparing sentence 1 with sentence 2 Both sentences have the same structure and both are grammatically well formed 1 Colorless green ideas sleep furiously Chomsky 1957 17 2 Harmless young children sleep quietly Sentence 1 is grammatical yet infelicitous because the pragmatics of the verb sleep cannot be expressed as an action carried out in a furious manner Hence a native speaker would rate this sentence as odd or unacceptable because the meaning does not make sense according to the English lexicon 6 nbsp Tree structure of the sentence Colourless green ideas sleep furiously Thus for Chomsky a grammatical string is not necessarily a meaningful one However speakers can understand nonsensical strings by means of natural intonation In addition non meaningful but grammatical sentences are often recalled more easily than ungrammatical sentences 7 Grammaticality versus acceptability editSee also Acceptability judgment task When Chomsky introduced the concept of grammaticality he also introduced the concept of acceptability Chomsky has emphasized that the notion of acceptable is not to be confused with grammatical 3 For linguists such as Hopper 8 who stress the role of social learning in contrast to innate knowledge of language there has been a gradual abandonment of talk about grammaticality in favour of acceptability Acceptability is 7 6 A sentence that is consciously considered acceptable by both the speaker and hearer A natural appropriate and meaningful sentence within a context Related to a speaker s performance and based on how a language would actually be used in a real situation Speaker oriented depending on what speakers consider appropriate On the other hand grammaticality is 7 6 A linguistic string that follows a set of given rules A grammatical utterance that is not necessarily meaningful Based on a native speaker s competence or knowledge of a language Defined by the possible outputs a particular grammar can generate In experiments grammaticality and acceptability are often confused but speakers may be asked to give their grammatical judgments instead of acceptability judgments The general assumption is that a native speaker s grammar produces grammatical strings and that the speaker can also judge whether the strings are acceptable in their language 7 Gradience in acceptability edit The traditional categorical interpretation of grammaticality is that a sentence is either grammatical or ungrammatical Many modern linguists including Sprouse 9 support this idea Acceptability judgments on the other hand fall in a continuous spectrum 9 7 Sentences may either be clearly acceptable or clearly unacceptable but there are also sentences that are partially acceptable Hence according to Sprouse the difference between grammaticality and acceptability is that grammatical knowledge is categorical but acceptability is a gradient scale 9 Linguists may use words numbers or typographical symbols such as question marks or asterisks to represent the judged acceptability of a linguistic string During a judgment task the speaker may report the acceptability of a sentence as acceptable marginally acceptable unacceptable terrible good etc Degrees of acceptability can also be represented by symbols such as or on a scale of 0 with 0 being acceptable and being unacceptable 10 On a seven point scale speakers can rate sentences from 1 least acceptable to 7 most acceptable 11 3 The Sally hugged him the Thomas 4 The Sally hugged him Thomas 5 The Sally hugged Thomas 6 Which the friend Thomas has painted a picture of 7 Which friend Thomas had painted a picture of 8 Which friend has Thomas painted the picture of Note that examples 3 8 are open to interpretation as judgement is based entirely on intuition and determination of grammaticality is dependent on one s theory of what the grammar is Therefore different individuals may assign the same sentence different degrees of acceptability Some linguists believe that the informal use of these symbols is problematic because the exact meaning of the symbols have never been properly defined and their usage is riddled with inconsistencies 12 13 14 Frequency affects acceptability edit Acceptability is about the actual use of a speaker s language in concrete situations Since it is speaker oriented it is possible to find instances of sentences that are assumed to be acceptable but ungrammatical 6 9 But if this ever changing world in which we live in Paul McCartney Live and Let Die 1973 Example 9 is ungrammatical because the preposition in is copied The rules of English prepositions only allow sentences such as 10a and 10b which show preposition pied piping structure in 10a and preposition stranding structure in 10b 15 Sentences 9 and 11c are ungrammatical but acceptable because of the frequency with which people hear the structure 6 10 a This world in which we live b This world which we live in c This world in which we live in Although 10c is acceptable due to a frequency affect sentences with preposition copying are judged to be ungrammatical as shown in 11c 11 a This table on which I put the book b This table which I put the book on c This table on which I put the book on Other factors that determine acceptability edit The prevailing models on grammaticality since Chomsky postulated that the acceptability of sentences is a scale with clearly acceptable on one side clearly unacceptable on the other and all manner of ranges of partial acceptability in between To explain the scale of partial acceptability linguists have said that phenomena other than grammatical knowledge such as semantic plausibility working memory limitations etc account for speakers reporting acceptability on a scale However there are a few exceptions to this trend including those who claim that strength of violation plays a role in grammaticality judgements Examples of linguists 16 of this persuasion include Huang s 17 proposal that ECP violations are stronger than Subjacency violations Chomsky s 18 proposal that each barrier crossed leads to lower acceptability and Optimality Theory esp Keller 19 20 12 Subjacency CP Whatj does TP Sue wonder CP when I broke j Sportiche 2014 287 13 Barrier Herselfj likes Maryj s mother Subjacency says that you cannot relate two positions across two bounding nodes In 12 we see that the movement of the wh expression what was moved past a Complementizer Phrase CP and a Tense Phrase TP to get to the specifier position of CP thus this phrase is ungrammatical Within the past twenty years however there has been a major shift in linguists understanding of intermediate levels of acceptability This is due to the increasing use of experimental methods to measure acceptability making it possible to detect subtle differences along a scale of acceptability 19 Norm based evaluation edit Prescriptive grammar of controlled natural languages defines grammaticality as a matter of explicit consensus On this view to consider a string as grammatical it should conform with a set of norms These norms are usually based on conventional rules that form a part of a higher or literary register for a given language For some languages a group of experts are appointed to define and regularly update these rules 7 Use of grammaticality judgments editResearch methods of sentence processing edit There are several methods that successfully investigate sentence processing some of which include eye tracking self paced listening and reading or cross modal priming The most productive method however is real time grammaticality judgements A grammaticality judgement is a test which involves showing participants sentences that are either grammatical or ungrammatical The participant must decide whether or not they find the sentences to be grammatical as quickly as possible Grammaticality is cross linguistic so this method has therefore been used on a wide variety of languages 21 Computer assisted language instruction edit Catt 22 and Catt amp Hirst 23 created a model of grammaticality based around a computer program developed for computer assisted language instruction which was designed to perform automatic error diagnosis and correction of ungrammaticalities produced by second language learners The program classified errors made by language learners in their sentences as being due to errors in phrase structure transformations morphology verb subcategorization or by the languages learners translating their primary language directly into the language they are learning The program worked primarily by utilizing a parser which consisted of constraints which if a first parsing attempt failed could be selectively relaxed Thus for a given parse the constraints which were relaxed indicated the precise nature and location of ungrammaticality 14 Assessing first language L1 competence edit There have been experiments conducted in order to test how early speakers gain the ability to judge grammaticality in their native language In an experiment by Cairns et al preschool children aged 4 6 were presented sentences such as 14 and 15 orally To make sure that the meaning of the sentences was clear to the children sentences were enacted with toys While sentence 14 is well formed in the adult grammar sentence 15 is not as indicated by the asterisk The source of the ill formedness is that the verb hug is a transitive verb and so must have a direct object namely something or someone who receives the action of the verb Sentence 15 is missing the receiver of hug 14 The kitten hugged the pig Carin 2006 215 15 The zebra hugged Carin 2006 215 The results of this study show that the earliest age at which children can discriminate well formed from ill formed sentences as well as correct these is at 6 years 24 During the critical period between 4 and 6 years old there is a significant increase in the accuracy of grammaticality judgments since metalinguistic skill is in critical development the judgment relies on the psycholinguistic ability of the child to access their internalized grammar and to compute whether it can or cannot generate the target sentence 24 This ability to judge the grammaticality of sentences seems to develop in children well after basic grammar skills have been established and is related to early reading acquisition acquisitionists generally believe that the ability to make grammaticality judgments is a measure of syntactic awareness 24 Assessing second language L2 competence edit Grammaticality judgment tasks can also be used to assess the competence of language learners Late learners of L2 perform worse on grammaticality judgment tasks or tests than native speakers or early acquirers in that L2 learners are more likely to accept a sentence that is ungrammatical as grammatical After the critical period age of acquisition is no longer supposed to have an effect and native like performance is no longer supposed to be achievable However the idea that there is a critical period for the acquisition of syntactic competence which is reflected by the ability to assess the well formedness of a sentence is controversial On one view biological or language specific mechanisms become nonfunctional after a certain age On another view decreased L2 learning ability with age is not inevitable and can be explained by factors such as motivation learning environment pressure and time commitment Although there is evidence that supports the claim that speakers outside the L2 mastery age range are not capable of acquiring native like mastery of a language there is also evidence supporting the opposite as well as evidence for young learners not mastering an L2 25 Performance related factors edit General processing problems rather than a deficit in some syntax specific process or module offer a viable explanation for populations that exhibit poor grammatical performance Performance on L2 grammaticality judgments might be partially due to variable accessibility to and use of relevant grammatical knowledge Difficulties in basic level cognitive processing are due to low L2 memory capacity poor L2 decoding ability slow L2 processing speedThese issues have been tied to grammatical processing performance by testing native speakers of English on the same tasks under stressful conditions there is shown to be difficulty in grammatical agreement when memory capacity is curtailed important cues in the language when given noisy input and processing important structures when not given enough time to process input This shows that knowledge cannot always be automatically and consistently applied under stressful situations without having processing difficulties However these issues are not necessarily independent of each other as low decoding ability of structure could affect processing speed Overall individual differences in L2 working memory and decoding ability are correlated to grammaticality judgment accuracy and latencies However there is no correlation between speed of processing measure and grammaticality judgment performance age of arrival correlates with syntactic mastery and knowledge of vocabulary probably drives grammaticality performance 26 27 Age related factors edit Age for decrease of L2 grammaticality performance varies from early childhood to late adolescence depending on the combinations of the speaker s first and second language The age of acquisition at which L2 learners are worse than native speakers depends on how dissimilar the L1 and L2 are on phonological and grammatical level For example Chinese English bilinguals at 7 years old perform just as well as Spanish English bilinguals at 16 years old 28 29 This is due to the fact that a grammatical construction on an L2 that has a parallel structure in an L1 would impose less processing demand than one that does not have a parallel causing a poorer performance on language structure There is evidence for late L2 learners generally having issues with plurals and past tense and not so many issues with Subject Verb Object testing in which they show native like results there is better performance on Yes No as well as Wh questions than on articles and past tense 26 There is data supporting high performing late learners well beyond the critical period in an experiment testing grammaticality by J L McDonald 7 out of 50 L2 English late learner subjects had scores within range of native speakers 26 The results are linked to how individual differences in L2 memory capacity decoding or processing speed affect processing resources to automatically apply the relevant grammatical knowledge Reliability of L2 grammaticality judgments edit The matter of reliability of L2 grammaticality judgments is an ongoing issue in the research field of second language acquisition Undeniably the case of second language judgments involves participants to make judgments concerning their knowledge of a language system that is not necessarily complete compared to the knowledge of their first language In an experiment participants may encounter sentences beyond their current knowledge resulting in guesswork To minimize guessing it is up to the linguists and researchers to select sentences that would better reflect a learner s knowledge of L2 30 Confounding factors in grammaticality judgements editSubject related factors edit Handedness edit Studies have been conducted which explored the degree to which left or right handedness plays a role in idiolectal variation of grammaticality judgements and have found that those with left handed immediate family members also referred to as familial sinistrality perform differently than participants with only right handed family members 31 32 They suggest that those with familial sinistrality are less sensitive to violations of sentence structure likely due to a correlation between this group and a less localized language module in the brain 32 Cowart 31 conducted a study specifically testing for the effects of familial sinistrality in grammatical judgement tasks Using a 4 point scale the experiment asked participants to judge sentences that followed the following model 17 a What did the scientist criticize Max s proof of b What did the scientist criticize a proof of c What did the scientist criticize the proof of d Why did the scientist criticize Max s proof of the theorem Examples 17a c are structural violations 17a violates the Specified Subject Condition and 17b c violate Subjacency while 17d is a grammatical control sentence It was found that since the violations were structural in nature participants with familial sinistrality were less sensitive to violations in such as the ones found 17a c while 17d showed no variation between participant groups In a similar study Bever Carrithers amp Townsend 32 found evidence that support Cowart s findings also showing that no judgement differences were found when comparing groups across variables such as age sex and verbal SAT score Task related factors edit Repetition edit There have been numerous studies addressing the effect of repetition on grammaticality judgements in experimental contexts 4 33 34 Repetition experiments are conducted by asking participants to give scaled ratings of sentences on their level of grammaticality In the first phase sentences are rated one at a time as a baseline measure of grammaticality level In the repetition phase participants rate each sentence after it has been displayed numerous times continuously with short pauses between each repetition They have generally found that repetition of a string significantly decreases participants grammaticality ratings of both grammatical and ungrammatical sentences 4 33 Two possible factors have been speculated to cause this affect 14 the first attributes this phenomenon to satiation the phenomenon of prolonged repetition leading to illusory changes in perception The second is that changes in participants judgement process occurred as a result of repetitions Repetition effects have been shown to not be present when sentences are displayed along with a preceding sentence to give the string context 33 Yes no responses edit When researchers interpret a yes no response on grammaticality they need to take into account of what the participants are responding to The speaker could be rejecting the sentence for reasons other than its grammaticality including the context or meaning of the sentence a particular word choice or other factors For example consider this ungrammatical sentence 35 16 The elephant are jumping A participant whether an adult or a child may reject this sentence because elephants do not jump To avoid this misinterpretation researchers need to clarify with the participants regarding the meaning of yes and no responses 35 Grammaticality illusion editStudies have shown that when native speakers judge ungrammatical sentences to be more acceptable than their grammatical counterpart grammaticality illusion has occurred 36 37 Consider Frazier s example 38 18 The apartment that the maid who the service had sent over was cleaning every week was well decorated 19 The apartment that the maid who the service had sent over was well decorated The English grammar allows structures such as sentence 18 while sentence 19 is not allowed Notice that sentence 19 is missing the verb phrase was cleaning every week In several studies 39 40 participants carried out offline and online tasks In the offline task 39 the participants rated their comprehension of sentences on a five point scale in a questionnaire The result revealed that the ungrammatical sentences were rated as good as or even better than grammatical sentences In the online study 40 participants did a self paced reading SPR task The sentence appears on a computer monitor word by word After each word participants were asked to choose if the sentence is still grammatical so far Then they would go on to rate the sentence from 1 perfectly good English to 7 really bad English The result showed that ungrammatical sentences were rated to be better than the grammatical ones Cross linguistic differences edit To find out if grammaticality illusion also occurs in other languages linguists have carried out similar experiments with different languages 36 37 Vasishth 37 hypothesized that different word order could be a factor of grammaticality illusion English sentences follow the order of subject verb object SVO while both German and Dutch have the subject object verb SOV order Based on the results German and Dutch participants do not show the effect of the illusion However if they were shown the sentences in English they also show the illusion Examples of grammatical and ungrammatical sentences in German 36 20 Der Anwalt den der Zeuge den der Spion betrachtete schnitt uberzeugte den Richter 21 Der Anwalt den der Zeuge den der Spion betrachtete uberzeugte den Richter Sentence 20 is grammatical whereas sentence 21 is ungrammatical Possible causes edit Gibson and Thomas 39 concludes from their offline acceptability ratings that working memory overload causes native speakers to prefer the ungrammatical sentence The shorter ungrammatical sentences were easier to process and made more sense The grammatical sentence with several embedded clauses such as was cleaning every week may require high memory load making it difficult for the participants to comprehend the sentence Studies of grammaticality illusion in other languages such as Dutch and German 37 suggest that different language structures prevent participants from making incorrect judgments For example a three verb sequence in subordinate clauses is more common in German or Dutch than in English As a result German or Dutch participants are well able to correctly rule out the ungrammatical sentences with the missing verb phrase See also editCommon English usage misconceptions Constituent linguistics Error linguistics List of linguistic example sentences Universal grammar Transformational grammarReferences edit McArthur Tom Lam McArthur Jacqueline Fontaine Lise 2018 The Oxford Companion to the English Language Oxford Reference doi 10 1093 acref 9780199661282 001 0001 ISBN 9780199661282 Millar Jim 2011 A critical introduction to syntax New York Continuum International Group p 119 ISBN 978 0 8264 9703 1 a b Chomsky Noam 1965 Aspects of the theory of syntax Massachusetts Cambridge M I T Press a b c Nagata H 1988 The relativity of linguistic intuition The effect of repetition on grammaticality judgments Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 17 1 1 17 doi 10 1007 bf01067178 S2CID 143737753 Chomsky 1957 Syntactic Structures The Hague Paris Mouton a b c d e Bauer Grammaticality acceptability possible words and large corpora 2014 a b c d e f Chapman Siobhan and Routledge Christopher Key Ideas in Linguistics and the Philosophy of Language 2009 Hopper Paul 1987 Emergent grammar In Aske Jon et al ed 1987 General session and parasession on grammar and cognition Proceedings of the thirteenth annual meeting Berkeley BLS 139 155 a b c Sprouse J 2007 Continuous acceptability categorical grammaticality and experimental syntax Biolinguistics 1 123 134 doi 10 5964 bioling 8597 S2CID 13058743 Bard Ellen Gurman Robertson Dan Sorace Antonella March 1996 Magnitude Estimation of Linguistic Acceptability Language 72 1 32 doi 10 2307 416793 ISSN 0097 8507 JSTOR 416793 Sprouse Jon 2013 Acceptability Judgments Linguistics Oxford Bibliographies obo www oxfordbibliographies com doi 10 1093 obo 9780199772810 0097 Retrieved 2018 12 11 Bader M Haussler J 2010 Toward a model of grammaticality judgments Journal of Linguistics 46 2 273 330 doi 10 1017 s0022226709990260 S2CID 145312924 Ross John Robert 1979 Where s English In Fillmore Charles Kempler Daniel Wang William eds Individual Differences in Language Ability and Language Behavior New York Academic Press pp 127 163 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 255950 1 50014 7 ISBN 9780122559501 a b c Schutze C T 2016 The empirical base of linguistics Grammaticality judgments and linguistic methodology Language Science Press ISBN 9783946234036 OCLC 945783708 RADFORD ANDREW FELSER CLAUDIA BOXELL OLIVER 2012 10 22 Preposition copying and pruning in present day English PDF English Language and Linguistics 16 3 403 426 doi 10 1017 s1360674312000172 ISSN 1360 6743 S2CID 120241363 Sprouse Continuous Acceptability Categorical Grammaticality and Experimental Syntax 2007 Huang Cheng Teh James 1982 Logical relations in Chinese and the theory of grammar Thesis thesis Massachusetts Institute of Technology hdl 1721 1 15215 Noam Chomsky 1986 Barriers Cambridge Mass MIT Press ISBN 978 0262530675 OCLC 12969567 a b Keller Frank 2000 Gradience in Grammar Experimental and Computational Aspects of Degrees of Grammaticality Ph D thesis Edinburgh University of Edinburgh doi 10 7282 T3GQ6WMS via Rutgers University Keller F 2003 A psychophysical law for linguistic judgments eScholarship University of California Kail M Lemaire P Lecacheur M 2012 Online grammaticality judgments in french young and older adults Experimental Aging Research 38 2 186 207 doi 10 1080 0361073x 2012 660031 PMID 22404540 S2CID 8675735 Catt Mark 1988 Intelligent diagnosis of ungrammaticality in computer assisted language instruction PDF Technical Report CSRI 218 Catt Mark Hirst Graeme 1990 An intelligent CALI system for grammatical error diagnosis Computer Assisted Language Learning 3 3 26 doi 10 1080 0958822900030102 a b c Cairns et al 2006 Development of a Metalinguistic Skill Judging the Grammaticality of Sentences Communication Disorders Quarterly 213 doi 10 1177 15257401060270040401 S2CID 146193377 McDonald Janet L 2000 Grammaticality judgments in a second language Influences of age of acquisition and native language Applied Psycholinguistics 21 3 395 423 doi 10 1017 s0142716400003064 S2CID 144005853 a b c McDonald Janet L 2006 Beyond the critical period Processing based explanations for poor grammaticality judgment performance by late second language learners Journal of Memory and Language 55 3 381 401 doi 10 1016 j jml 2006 06 006 Mackey Alison Abbuhl Rebekha Gass Susan M 2009 Interactionist approach The Routledge Handbook of Second Language Acquisition Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203808184 ch1 ISBN 9780203808184 Johnson J S Newport E L 1989 Critical period effects in second language learning The influence of maturational state on the acquisition of English as a second language Cognitive Psychology 21 1 60 99 doi 10 1016 0010 0285 89 90003 0 PMID 2920538 S2CID 15842890 Birdsong D Molis M 2001 On the evidence for maturational constraints in second language acquisition Journal of Memory and Language 44 2 235 249 doi 10 1006 jmla 2000 2750 Tarone E E Cohen A D Gass S M 2013 Research methodology in second language acquisition Taylor and Francis pp 303 320 ISBN 9781135445348 a b Cowart Wayne 1989 Notes on the biology of syntactic processing Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 18 1 89 103 doi 10 1007 bf01069049 ISSN 0090 6905 PMID 2647963 S2CID 20011906 a b c Bever Thomas G Carrithers Caroline Townsend David J 1987 A tale of two brains or the sinistral quasimodularity of language Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Cognitive Science Society Meetings 764 773 a b c Nagata Hiroshi 1989 Repetition Effect in Judgments of Grammaticality of Sentences Examination with Ungrammatical Sentences Perceptual and Motor Skills 68 1 275 282 doi 10 2466 pms 1989 68 1 275 ISSN 0031 5125 S2CID 144626702 CARROLL JOHN M 1979 Complex compounds phrasal embedding in lexical structures Linguistics 17 9 10 doi 10 1515 ling 1979 17 9 10 863 ISSN 0024 3949 S2CID 145789336 a b Lust Barbara Blume Maria 2016 8 The Grammaticality Judgment Task Research Methods in Language AcquisitionPrinciples Procedures and Practices De Gruyter Mouton doi 10 1037 15968 009 ISBN 9783110415339 a b c Vasishth Shravan Suckow Katja Lewis Richard L Kern Sabine 2010 Short term forgetting in sentence comprehension Crosslinguistic evidence from verb final structures Language and Cognitive Processes 25 4 533 567 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 492 8407 doi 10 1080 01690960903310587 ISSN 0169 0965 S2CID 17553104 a b c d Frank Stefan L Trompenaars Thijs Vasishth Shravan 2016 Cross Linguistic Differences in Processing Double Embedded Relative Clauses Working Memory Constraints or Language Statistics Cognitive Science 40 3 554 578 doi 10 1111 cogs 12247 ISSN 1551 6709 PMID 25943302 Frazier Lyn 1985 Syntactic complexity Natural language parsing pp 129 189 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511597855 005 ISBN 9780511597855 Retrieved 2018 12 16 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help a b c Gibson E Thomas J 1999 Memory Limitations and Structural Forgetting The Perception of Complex Ungrammatical Sentences as Grammatical Language and Cognitive Processes 14 3 225 248 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 486 7065 doi 10 1080 016909699386293 a b Christiansen Morten H MacDonald Maryellen C 2009 A Usage Based Approach to Recursion in Sentence Processing Language Learning 59 s1 126 161 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9922 2009 00538 x ISSN 1467 9922 Further reading editBader M Haussler J 2010 Toward a model of grammaticality judgments Journal of Linguistics 46 2 273 330 Nagata H 1988 The relativity of linguistic intuition The effect of repetition on grammaticality judgments Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 17 1 1 17 Bross F 2019 Acceptability Ratings in Linguistics A Practical Guide to Grammaticality Judgments Data Collection and Statistical Analysis Version 1 0 Mimeo Cairns H Schlisselberg G Waltzman D McDaniel D 2006 Development of a metalinguistic skill judging the grammaticality of sentences Communication Disorders Quarterly 27 4 213 220 doi 10 1177 15257401060270040401 S2CID 146193377 Champman Siobhan and Routledge Christoper 2009 Key ideas in Linguistics and the Philosophy of Language Edinburgh GBR Edinburgh University Press Chomsky 1957 Syntactic Structures The Hague Paris Mouton Fetzer A 2004 Recontextualizing context Grammaticality meets appropriateness Philadelphia Amsterdam John Benjamins Pub Hopper Paul 1987 Emergent grammar In Aske Jon et al ed 1987 General session and parasession on grammar and cognition Proceedings of the thirteenth annual meeting Berkeley BLS 139 155 Kail M Lemaire P Lecacheur M 2012 Online grammaticality judgments in french young and older adults Experimental Aging Research 38 2 186 207 doi 10 1080 0361073x 2012 660031 PMID 22404540 S2CID 8675735 Schutze C T 2016 The empirical base of linguistics Grammaticality judgments and linguistic methodology Language Science Press Sportiche D Koopman H Stabler E 2014 An introduction to Syntactic Analysis and Theory Wiley Balckwell Sprouse J 2007 Continuous acceptability categorical grammaticality and experimental syntax Biolinguistics 1 123 134 doi 10 5964 bioling 8597 S2CID 13058743 External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of grammaticality at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grammaticality amp oldid 1180842567, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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