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autonomous syntax

the theory that syntax is an autonomous component of language that operates independently of meaning (semantics) and function (pragmatics). Such a view explains how a sentence with no meaningful content or communicative function can nevertheless be recognized as grammatical by native speakers (see grammaticality). It also explains why syntactic rules, such as number agreement between subject and verb, operate regardless of the semantic relationship between the sentence elements. For example, in the two sentences The boy is slamming the doors and The doors are being slammed by the boy, the verb takes different forms to agree with the grammatical subject in each case (boy is; doors are), regardless of the fact that in both cases the boy is the agent of the action, and the doors are its patient. See case grammar. [introduced by Noam Chomsky]

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Psychology term of the day

December 23rd 2024

Edwards Social Desirability Scale

Edwards Social Desirability Scale

a 39-item inventory derived from the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory and used to measure whether respondents are truthful in self-reports or are misrepresenting themselves in a way likely to be seen as positive by others. [developed in the 1950s by Allen L. Edwards]