universal grammar

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English

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Noun

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universal grammar (plural universal grammars)

  1. (linguistics) A hypothetical innate abstract system in the human brain that underlies the grammar of all human languages.
    • 1988, Andrew Radford, chapter 5, in Transformational grammar: a first course, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, page 276:
      At this point, let's gather together various loose ends, and try and paint a
      simple picture of the overall model of grammar which we are moving towards.
      We might suppose that Universal Grammar makes available a set of category-
      neutral pairs of rule-schemas such as those numbered (i) and (ii) in (168–170)
      above. The members of each pair of rule-schemas differ only in respect of the
      relative ordering of constituents. The task of the child acquiring the grammar
      of a particular language is thus to determine which ordering options are
      selected in the language he is acquiring. For example, the child has to deter-
      mine whether a given language is a head-first language incorporating rule-
      schema (168) (i), or a head-last language incorporating schema (168) (ii): in
      other words, the child has to ‘setʼ the relevant word-order parameter for Com-
      plements, Specifiers, Adjuncts, and so forth. The picture is complicated by the
      fact that some languages permit more than one ordering option: for example,
      as we have already seen, English selects the head-first and specifier-first orders
      as the unmarked option, but also selects the ‘mirror imageʼ orders as a marked option.

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