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PanPacificAssociationofAppliedLinguistics12(1),1128 ∗ ! " # $ " # %&''() # %*)" **+&(# Recent developments in theories of language (grammars) seem to share a number of tenets which mark a drastic shift from traditional disentangled descriptionsoflanguage:emphasisonabignumberofdiscretegrammatical rules or a corpus of structure patterns has given way to a more unitary, explanatorypowerfuldescriptionoflanguageinformedbyasoundtheoryof languageacquisition,ontheonehand,andverified/refutedbyobservationson samplesoflanguageuse,ontheother.Twowidelywelcomeofsuchtheories are Chomsky’s Universal Grammar and Halliday’s Systemic Functional Linguistics. These two theories have been initiated and developed almost independently and each has been successful in accounting for aspects of languagefromaparticularperspective.However,theyseemtostandmoreina complementarypositionwithrespecttoeachotherthaninaconfrontingstance againstoneanother.Thisarticleaimsatprovidingevidenceforsuchaclaimto supportthearguethatnotonlyaren’tthesetwotheoriesmutuallyexclusivebut theyarerathermutuallydependent;thereisasenseinwhicheachneedsto internalize and incorporate aspects of the other if a fullyfledged accountof languageistobeachieved. , - systemicfunctionallinguistics,universalgrammar,(in)congruent forms,cliticization * . th Since its birth in early 20 century, linguistics has witnessed a big number of changesinitstrends,orientations,subjectsofstudy,andhencetheoriesoflanguage and language acquisition. Apart from the influential reorientation from the ‘historical or diachronic linguistics’ towards a ‘synchronic linguistics’ which marked the beginning of modern linguistics, the most salient demarcation line between current theories of grammar can be sketched by way of reference to Saussure’s consideration of syntagmatic versus paradigmatic relations among linguisticitems(Sampson,1980).Linguisticitemsaresaidtobesyntagmatically relatedwhenviewedasalinearsequenceandparadigmaticallyrelatedwhenviewed aspotentialsubstitutesfortheirsimilarlypositionedcounterpartswithinthegiven ∗ First/correspondingauthor:FiroozSadighi,secondauthor:MohammadBavali. 11©2008PAAL13458353/00 sequence.Grammars,then,couldbeviewedasseeingthelanguageasknowledgeof either primarily syntagmatic relations among linguistic constituents or predominantlyparadigmaticrelationsamonglinguisticitems.Theformerhasledto grammars such as Markov’s FiniteState grammar, structural (descriptive) linguistics,andChomsky’sgenerativetransformationalgrammar(nowUG),andthe latter has given rise to Firth’s London school of linguistics, Jakobson’s Prague school of linguistics, and Halliday’s systemic functional linguistics (see Lyons, 1981andSampson,1980). Twotheories,ofthosejustmentionedhaveattractedmostattentionandhave beenfrequentlyaddressedandemployedinliteratureonbothlinguisticsandapplied linguistics. They are Chomsky’s Universal Grammar and Halliday’s Systemic FunctionalLinguistics.Thesetwotheorieshavebeeninitiatedanddevelopedalmost independentlyandeachhasbeensuccessfulinaccountingforaspectsoflanguage from a particular perspective. However, they seem to stand more in a complementarypositionwithrespecttoeachotherthan inaconfrontingstance againstoneanother.Thefollowinglinesbearanaccountofthesetwotheoriesof language, their merits and inadequacies, and the way in which each would contributetothecompletionoftheother. & InChomskyantradition,grammarofalanguageisanaccountofthegrammatical competence (rather than performance) of the native speakers of that language. Grammaticalcompetenceisdefinedasthenativespeakers’tacitknowledgeofthe grammar of their language (Chomsky, 1965). Native speakers’ grammatical competence is determined by eliciting their intuitions about grammaticality of sentencesgeneratedintheirownlanguage(knownas ) andabouttheinterpretationofsentences(e.g.realizingambiguousorparaphrase forms,etc.)(ibid).Agrammarissaidtobe ifityieldsthe samestatementsaboutthe(un)grammaticalityandinterpretationsofthesentences asthenativespeakersofthatlanguagedo.AUniversalGrammar,however,isnot anaccountofthegrammarofanindividuallanguage(e.g.English,orFrench).Itis, moreprecisely,a ;itis,inRadford’s(1997)words,“asetof hypothesesaboutthenatureofpossibleandimpossiblegrammarsofnatural(i.e. human) languages” (p.5). It follows that any grammar could be descriptively adequate if and only if it describes the properties of the intended language in accordancewithandfromamongthoseuniversalpropertiesalreadypredictedand devised within the theory of Universal Grammar. This gives rise to one further criterion;thatof .Thesecondcriterionofadequacyforgrammarsisthat ofexplanatoryadequacy.AtheoryofUniversalGrammar(henceforthUG)issaid tobe ifitcouldsuccessfullyexplainwhyitcontainsthe propertiesitdoes. Inadditiontoallthesecriteria,therearestillthreemoreconditionstobe satisfiedbyatheoryofUG:onethatanytheoryofUGmustbe innature; thatisthedescriptivepoweroftheUGmustnotbesounlimitedthatitsdescriptive 12 devices could describe as well the artificial languages (e.g. computer and mathematicslanguages)orotherhumanandnonhumancommunicationsystems. One more criterion of adequacy that a theory of language must meet is the principlewhichassumesthatalinguistictheoryisadequateifandonly ifthegrammaritgeneratescouldbeeasilylearnedbychildreninarelativelyshort periodoftimejustastheynormallydoinearlychildhood.Inotherwords,the grammarmustbeassimpleaspossible.Thesehaveledtoanewmovementwithin UG, beginning in 1990s by Chomsky himself, which aims at minimizing the theoretical and descriptive devices in devising grammatical properties of natural languages in favor of maximizing the simplicity and hence learnability of the grammar.Thismovementisknownas. CloselyassociatedwithatheoryofUGistheproblemofexplicatingthe acquisitionofgrammarknownastheLogicalProblem(Hawkins,2001,p.1;Foster Cohen,1999,p.5).Itaddressestheimportantquestionofhowchildrenacquirethe grammar of their language (the initial stage) so rapidly and uniformly in a remarkablyshortperiodoftime(ataroundtheageof18monthsuptoaround30 months).Asecondproblem,knownasthedevelopmentalproblem,concernsthe way(s)in whichchildrengothroughotherstages(transitionandfinalstage)of learning (ibid). Chomsky’s explanation for such phenomena is that children are genetically predisposed with an innate language faculty which facilitates the acquisitionoflanguage.ThisinnatelanguagefacultyiswhatChomskyconceivesof as UG which comprises a set of implicit abstract that govern the grammaticaloperationsallowedandnotallowedinallnaturallanguages.Examples of such principles are (which holds that all grammaticaloperationsarestructuredependent,i.e.theyare,accordingtoRadford (ibid,p.15),sensitivetothegrammaticalstructureofthesentencestheyapplyto). To account for the observed differences across languages in their grammaticalstructure,UGhasincorporatedintoitsstructureanumberoflanguage specificvariations“whichchildrenhavetolearnaspartofthetaskofacquiring theirnativelanguage.Thus,languageacquisitioninvolvesnotonlylexicallearning butalsosomestructurallearning”(ibid,p.16).Thesegrammaticalvariationsare referredtoas Itfollowsthatwhilesomeaspectsofthegrammatical structureoflanguagesaredeterminedbyinnategrammaticalprincipleswhichwill nothavetobelearnedbychildren,someothershavetobeacquiredasparametric variationsacrosslanguages.“Inotherwords,structurallearningwillbelimitedto aspectsofstructure”(p.16).Examplesofparametersinclude according to which some languages (Italian, Spanish, Irish, Chinese,etc.)arenullsubject,i.e.theirfiniteverbslicenseeitherovertorcovert (null)subjects,whileothersarenonnullsubjectlanguages(French,English,etc.), thatisfiniteverbsinsuchlanguageslicenseonlyovertsubjects,notnullsubjects. Oneimportantpointtoconsideristhattherearegeneticconstraintsontherangeof structural(parametric)variationallowedindifferentlanguagessothat,inprinciple, allparametricvariationsappeartooscillatealongabinarychoice(withonlytwo possiblesettings)andthatanylanguageallowsforonlyone(uniform)possibility 13 andnotacombinationofboth(nosinglelanguagewithsomeformssettoonevalue andotherssettotheother). ! is an important aspect of grammatical structure which is parameterizedalongvariousconstructions.Onesuchconstructionsmakesupthe "# which determines whether whexpressions can be fronted or not. Anothertypeofwordordervariationiscalledthe which statesthatlanguagesvaryintermsoftherelativepositionofheadswithrespectto theircomplementswithinphrases:whileEnglishisaheadfirstlanguage,Japanese isaheadlastlanguage. Inlightoftheabove,onecangeneralizethat“theonlystructurallearning whichchildrenfaceinacquiringtheirnativelanguageisthetaskofdeterminingthe appropriate value for each of the relevant structural parameters along which languagesvary”(p.20). / SystemicFunctionalGrammarorLinguistics,firstintroducedbyMichaelHalliday (1985),referstoanewapproachtothestudyofgrammarthatisradicallydifferent from the traditional view in which language is a set of rules for specifying grammaticalstructures.Inthisview,languageisaresourceformakingmeanings and hence grammar is a resource for creating meaning by means of wording. Halliday&Matthiessen(1999,p.3)clarifytheirpositionwithrespecttoSFLas follows: For the task of constructing such a meaning base, we shall use a grammar.Asystemicgrammarisoneoftheclassoffunctional grammars,whichmeans(amongotherthings)thatitissemantically motivated,or‘natural’,Incontradistinctiontoformalgrammars,which are autonomous, and therefore semantically arbitrary, in a systemic grammareverycategory(and‘category’isusedhereinthe general senseofanorganizingtheoreticalconcept,notinthenarrowersenseof ‘calss’asinformalgrammar)isbasedonmeaning:ithasasemanticas wellasaformal,lexicogrammaticalreactance. Tocapturetheessenceofthedistinctionbetweengrammarandtheoriesof grammar,HallidayandMatthiessen(1997,1999)callthelatter‘grammatics’.They furtherunderscoretheneedforarichertheoryofgrammar(i.e.SFL),claimingthat thetraditional‘grammarasrule’typeoftheoryfallsfarshortofthedemandsthat arenowbeingmadeongrammaticaltheories: Atthisstageinhistory,weneedarichertheoryofgrammartomeetthe challenges of the age of information, e.g. in education and in computation(HallidayandMatthiessen,1997,p.1). 14
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