Formal English Grammar

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School of Computing FACULTY OF ENGINEERING. Formal English Grammar. COMP3310 Natural Language Processing Eric Atwell, Language Research Group. Outline for Grammar/Parsing. Context-Free Grammars and Constituency Some common CFG phenomena for English Sentence-level constructions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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School of somethingFACULTY OF OTHER

School of ComputingFACULTY OF ENGINEERING

COMP3310 Natural Language Processing

Eric Atwell, Language Research Group

Formal English Grammar

Outline for Grammar/Parsing

Context-Free Grammars and Constituency

Some common CFG phenomena for English

• Sentence-level constructions

• Standard parts of a sentence: NP, PP, VP

• Problems: coordination, agreement, subcategorization, movement, …

• Top-down and Bottom-up Parsing

• Chart Parsing

Review

Parts of Speech

• Basic syntactic/morphological categories that words belong to

Part of Speech tagging

• Assigning parts of speech to all the words in a sentence

Syntax

Syntax: from Greek syntaxis “setting out together, arrangement’’

Refers to the way words are arranged together, and the relationship between them.

Distinction:

• Prescriptive grammar: how people ought to talk

• Descriptive grammar: how they do talk

Goal of syntax is to model the knowledge of that people unconsciously have about the grammar of their native language

Syntax

Why should we care?

• Grammar checkers

• Question answering

• Information extraction

• Machine translation

key ideas of syntax

Constituency (we’ll spend most of our time on this)

Subcategorization

Grammatical relations

Plus one part we won’t have time for:

Movement/long-distance dependency

Context-Free Grammars (CFG)

Capture constituency and ordering

• Ordering:

• What are the rules that govern the ordering of words and bigger units in the language?

• Constituency:

How words group into units and how the various kinds of units behave

Constituency

E.g., Noun phrases (NPs)

• Three parties from Brooklyn

• A high-class spot such as Mindy’s

• The Broadway coppers

• They

• Harry the Horse

• The reason he comes into the Hot Box

How do we know these form a constituent?

Constituency (II)

• They can all appear before a verb:

• Three parties from Brooklyn arrive…

• A high-class spot such as Mindy’s attracts…

• The Broadway coppers love…

• They sit

• But individual words can’t always appear before verbs:

• *from arrive…

• *as attracts…

• *the is

• *spot is…

• Must be able to state generalizations like:

• Noun phrases occur before verbs

Constituency (III)

Preposing and postposing:

• On September 17th, I’d like to fly from Atlanta to Denver

• I’d like to fly on September 17th from Atlanta to Denver

• I’d like to fly from Atlanta to Denver on September 17th.

But not:

• *On September, I’d like to fly 17th from Atlanta to Denver

• *On I’d like to fly September 17th from Atlanta to Denver

CFG example

S -> NP VP

NP -> Det NOMINAL

NOMINAL -> Noun

VP -> Verb

Det -> a

Noun -> flight

Verb -> left

CFGs: set of rules

S -> NP VP

• This says that there are units called S, NP, and VP in this language

• That an S consists of an NP followed immediately by a VP

• Doesn’t say that that’s the only kind of S

• Nor does it say that this is the only place that NPs and VPs occur

Generativity

As with Finite State Automatons, you can view these rules as either analysis or synthesis machines

• Generate strings in the language

• Reject strings not in the language

• Impose structures (trees) on strings in the language

Used to define grammatical vs. ungrammatical sentences

A “generative grammar” is NOT only for producing/generating of output sentences,

it is also for analysis/parsing of input sentences

Derivations

A derivation is a sequence of rules applied to a string that accounts for that string

• Covers all the elements in the string

• Covers only the elements in the string

Derivations as Trees

S

NP VP

NP

VerbPronoun

Nominal

Article NounNoun

I prefer morninga flight

CFGs more formally

A context-free grammar has 4 parameters

(“is a 4-tuple”)

1) A set of non-terminal symbols (“variables”) N

2) A set of terminal symbols (disjoint from N)

3) A set of productions P, each of the form

• A ->

• Where A is a non-terminal and is a string of symbols from the infinite set of strings ( N)*

4) A designated start symbol S

Parsing

Parsing is the process of taking a sentence and a grammar and returning one (or more) parse tree(s) for that sentence.

(more on parsing algorithms later…)

If the parser fails – it cannot build a parse-tree for the sentence – then EITHER the sentence is ungrammatical OR the grammar is “not good enough” (it is hard to write down every grammar rule for general English!)

Context- free?

The notion of context in Context Free Grammars has nothing to do with the ordinary meaning of the word context

All it really means is that the non-terminal on the left-hand side of a rule is out there all by itself (free of context)

A -> B C

Means that I can rewrite an A as a B followed by a C regardless of the context in which A is found

Key Constituents of English grammar

Sentences

Noun phrases

Verb phrases

Prepositional phrases

Sentence-Types

Declaratives: A plane left

S -> NP VP

Imperatives: Leave!

S -> VP

Yes-No Questions: Did the plane leave?

S -> Aux NP VP

WH Questions: When did the plane leave?

S -> WH Aux NP VP

NPs

NP -> Pronoun

• I came, you saw it, they conquered

NP -> Proper-Noun

• Los Angeles is west of Texas

• John Hennessy is the president of Stanford

NP -> Det Noun

• The president

NP -> Nominal

Nominal -> Noun Noun

• A morning flight to Denver

PPs

PP -> Preposition NP

• From LA

• To the store

• On Tuesday morning

• With lunch

Recursion

We’ll have to deal with rules such as the following where the non-terminal on the left also appears somewhere on the right (directly)

NP -> NP PP [[The flight] [to Boston]]

VP -> VP PP [[departed Miami] [at noon]]

Recursion

Of course, this is what makes syntax (and parsing) interesting

Flights from Denver

Flights from Denver to Miami

Flights from Denver to Miami in February

Flights from Denver to Miami in February on a Friday

Flights from Denver to Miami in February on a Friday under $300

Flights from Denver to Miami in February on a Friday under $300 with lunch

Recursion

[[Flights] [from Denver]]

[[[Flights] [from Denver]] [to Miami]]

[[[[Flights] [from Denver]] [to Miami]] [in February]]

[[[[[Flights] [from Denver]] [to Miami]] [in February]] [on a Friday]]

Etc.

NP -> NP PP

Implications of recursion and context-freeness

If you have a rule like

• VP -> V NP

• It only cares that the thing after the verb is an NP

It doesn’t have to know about the internal affairs of that NP

The point

VP -> V NP

(I) hate

flights from Denver

flights from Denver to Miami

flights from Denver to Miami in February

flights from Denver to Miami in February on a Friday

flights from Denver to Miami in February on a Friday under $300

flights from Denver to Miami in February on a Friday under $300 with lunch

Bracketed Notation

[S [NP [PRO I]] [VP [V prefer] [NP [Det a] [Nom [N morning]

[N flight] ] ] ] ]S

NP VP

NP

VerbPro

Nom

Det NounNoun

I prefer morninga flight

Coordination Constructions

S -> S and S

• John went to NY and Mary followed him

NP -> NP and NP

VP -> VP and VP

In fact the right rule for English is

X -> X and X (Metarule)

However we can say

“He was longwinded and a bully.”

Problems

Agreement

Subcategorization

Movement (for want of a better term)

Agreement

This dog

Those dogs

NP Determiner Noun

This dog eats

Those dogs eat

S NP VP

NP Det Noun

VP Verb

*This dogs

*Those dog

*This dog eat

*Those dogs eats

Possible CFG Solution

S -> NP VP

NP -> Det Noun

VP -> Verb

but we need duplicate rules

for Sg (singular) and Pl (plural)

SgS -> SgNP SgVP

PlS -> PlNp PlVP

SgNP -> SgDet SgNom

PlNP -> PlDet PlNom

PlVP -> PlV NP

SgVP ->SgV Np

It works and stays within the formal constraints of CFGs

But it’s ugly – lots of duplication

Subcategorization

Sneeze: John sneezed

*John sneezed the book

Say: You said [United has a flight]S

Prefer: I prefer [to leave earlier]TO-VP

*I prefer United has a flight

Give: Give [me]NP[a cheaper fare]NP

Help: Can you help [me]NP[with a flight]PP

*Give with a flight

Subcategorization

Subcategorization expresses the constraints that a predicate (verb) places on the number and syntactic types of arguments it wants to take (occur with).

So?

So the various rules for VPs overgenerate

• They permit the presence of strings containing verbs and arguments that don’t go together

• For example:

• VP -> V NP

• therefore

Sneezed the book is a VP since “sneeze” is a verb and “the book” is a valid NP

Possible CFG Solution

VP -> V

VP -> V NP

VP -> V NP PP

VP -> IntransV

VP -> TransV NP

VP -> TransVwPP NP PP

It works and stays within the formal constraints of CFGs

But it’s ugly – lots of duplication

Subcat constraints are really SEMANTIC not syntactic

Movement

Core example

• My travel agent booked the flight

• [[My travel agent]NP [booked [the flight]NP]VP]S

i.e. “book” is a straightforward transitive verb. It expects a single NP within the VP as an argument, and a single NP as the subject.

Movement

What about?

• Which flight do you want me to have the travel agent book?

The direct object argument to “book” isn’t appearing in the right place. It is in fact a long way from where its supposed to appear.

And note that it’s separated from its verb by 2 other verbs.

Some theories of grammar say there is a CFG “base/deep” grammar, plus extra rules/mechanisms for “movement”

Eg read Noam Chomsky 1957 “Syntactic Structures”

CFGs: a summary

CFGs appear to be just about what we need to account for a lot of basic syntactic structure in English.

But there are problems: coordination, agreement, subcategorization, movement, …

… maybe these can be dealt with adequately, although not elegantly, by staying within the CFG framework.

There are simpler, more elegant, solutions that take us out of the CFG framework (beyond its formal power).

Syntactic theories: TG, HPSG, LFG, GPSG, etc.

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