Grammatical rules are discrete, not weighted, and not vulnerable

Authors

Hubert Haider
University of Salzburg

Synopsis

The paper defends the following positions: Grammaticality and acceptability must not be regarded as virtually coextensive. Grammaticality is discrete; acceptability is gradient. Acceptability can be measured directly; grammaticality can only be tested indirectly. Acceptability is a reflex of performance factors interacting with the mentally represented grammatical rule system; grammaticality is a theoretical concept. Acceptability is a theory-independent behavioral property; grammaticality is defined by the cognitively encapsulated grammar, which is the empirical research target of grammar theory.

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Published

December 7, 2019

How to Cite

Haider, H. (2019). Grammatical rules are discrete, not weighted, and not vulnerable. In K. R. Christensen, H. Jørgensen, & J. Wood (Eds.), The Sign of the V: Papers in Honour of Sten Vikner. AU Library Scholarly Publishing Services. https://doi.org/10.7146/aul.348.96