In linguistics, generative grammar is grammar (the set of language rules) that
indicates the structure and interpretation of sentences that native speakers of
a language accept as belonging to their language.
Adopting the term generative from mathematics, linguist Noam
Chomsky introduced the concept of generative grammar in the 1950s. This theory
is also known as transformational grammar, a term still used today.
Generative Grammar
• Generative grammar is a theory of grammar, first developed by Noam Chomsky
in the 1950s, that is based on the idea that all humans have an innate language
capacity.
• Linguists who study generative grammar are not interested in prescriptive rules;
rather, they are interested in uncovering the foundational principals that guide all
language production.
• Generative grammar accepts as a basic premise that native speakers of a language
will find certain sentences grammatical or ungrammatical and that these judgments
give insight into the rules governing the use of that language.
Definition of Generative Grammar
Grammar refers to the set of rules that structure a language, including syntax (the
arrangement of words to form phrases and sentences) and morphology (the study
of words and how they are formed). Generative grammar is a theory of grammar
that holds that human language is shaped by a set of basic principles that are part
of the human brain (and even present in the brains of small children). This
"universal grammar," according to linguists like Chomsky, comes from our innate
language faculty.
In Linguistics for Non-Linguists: A Primer With Exercises, Frank Parker and
Kathryn Riley argue that generative grammar is a kind of unconscious knowledge
that allows a person, no matter what language they speak, to form "correct"
sentences. They continue:
"Simply put, a generative grammar is a theory of competence: a model of the
psychological system of unconscious knowledge that underlies a speaker's ability to
produce and interpret utterances in a language ... A good way of trying to understand
[Noam] Chomsky's point is to think of a generative grammar as essentially
indicates the structure and interpretation of sentences that native speakers of
a language accept as belonging to their language.
Adopting the term generative from mathematics, linguist Noam
Chomsky introduced the concept of generative grammar in the 1950s. This theory
is also known as transformational grammar, a term still used today.
Generative Grammar
• Generative grammar is a theory of grammar, first developed by Noam Chomsky
in the 1950s, that is based on the idea that all humans have an innate language
capacity.
• Linguists who study generative grammar are not interested in prescriptive rules;
rather, they are interested in uncovering the foundational principals that guide all
language production.
• Generative grammar accepts as a basic premise that native speakers of a language
will find certain sentences grammatical or ungrammatical and that these judgments
give insight into the rules governing the use of that language.
Definition of Generative Grammar
Grammar refers to the set of rules that structure a language, including syntax (the
arrangement of words to form phrases and sentences) and morphology (the study
of words and how they are formed). Generative grammar is a theory of grammar
that holds that human language is shaped by a set of basic principles that are part
of the human brain (and even present in the brains of small children). This
"universal grammar," according to linguists like Chomsky, comes from our innate
language faculty.
In Linguistics for Non-Linguists: A Primer With Exercises, Frank Parker and
Kathryn Riley argue that generative grammar is a kind of unconscious knowledge
that allows a person, no matter what language they speak, to form "correct"
sentences. They continue:
"Simply put, a generative grammar is a theory of competence: a model of the
psychological system of unconscious knowledge that underlies a speaker's ability to
produce and interpret utterances in a language ... A good way of trying to understand
[Noam] Chomsky's point is to think of a generative grammar as essentially