Content deleted Content added
Omnipaedista (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Undid revision 475789257 by 82.137.200.43 (talk) |
||
Line 26:
==Background==
From its inception
With his book ''[[Syntactic Structures]]'' (1957), Chomsky established the concept of [[transformational generative grammar]] (TGG), a formal approach to linguistic theorizing, and revolutionized the discipline of linguistics. In ''[[Aspects of the Theory of Syntax]]'' (1965), the TGG model went through a revision, which included the inclusion of a lexical component, the separation of deep from surface structures, and the introduction of some technical innovations such as syntactic features and recursive phrase structure rules. This ''Aspects'' model came to be known as the "Standard Theory". During the early 1970s, some of the rules in the Standard Theory got refined and led to the "Extended Standard Theory", where different syntactic levels contained information relevant to the meaning. Further revisions and technical innovations such as introduction of "empty categories", "X-bar theory", "D- and S-structures", and conditions on representations such as "Case filter", etc. led to the "Revised Extended Standard Theory", in which the grammatical model was greatly simplified. ''Lectures on Government and Binding'' contains the next step in Chomskyan linguistic thought where [[Universal Grammar]] and the investigation of its characteristics assume central importance.
|