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Inlinguistics,coordination is a complexsyntactic structure that links together two or more elements; these elements are calledconjuncts orconjoins. The presence of coordination is often signaled by the appearance of a coordinator (coordinating conjunction), e.g.and,or,but (in English). The totality of coordinator(s) andconjuncts forming an instance of coordination is called acoordinate structure. The unique properties of coordinate structures have motivated theoretical syntax to draw a broad distinction between coordination andsubordination.[1] It is also one of the manyconstituency tests in linguistics. Coordination is one of the most studied fields in theoretical syntax, but despite decades of intensive examination, theoretical accounts differ significantly and there is no consensus on the best analysis.
Acoordinator or acoordinating conjunction, often appears between the conjuncts, usually at least between the penultimate and ultimate conjunct of thecoordinate structure. The wordsand andor are by far the most frequently occurring coordinators in English. Other coordinators occur less often and have unique properties, e.g.but,as well as,then, etc. The coordinator usually serves to link the conjuncts and indicate the presence of a coordinate structure. Depending on the number of coordinators used, coordinate structures can be classified assyndetic,asyndetic, orpolysyndetic.
Different types of coordinators are also categorised differently. The table below shows the categories for the coordinators in English:[2]
| Coordinator | Category |
|---|---|
| and | conjunctive coordination |
| or | disjunctive coordination |
| but | adversative coordination |
Coordination is a very flexible mechanism of syntax. Any givenlexical orphrasal category can be coordinated. The examples throughout this article employ the convention whereby the conjuncts of coordinate structures are marked using square brackets and bold script. In the following examples, the coordinate structure includes all the material that follows the left-most square bracket and precedes the right-most square bracket. The coordinator appears in normal script between the conjuncts.
Data of this sort could easily be expanded to include everylexical andphrasal category. An important aspect of the above data is that the conjuncts each time areconstituents. In other words, the material enclosed in brackets would qualify as a constituent in bothphrase structure grammars anddependency grammars.
Theoretical accounts of coordination vary in major respects. For instance, approaches to coordination inconstituency anddependency differ significantly, and derivational and representational systems are also likely to disagree on many aspects of how coordination should be explained. Derivational accounts, for instance, are more likely to assume transformational mechanisms to "rectify" non-constituent conjuncts (e.g. conjunction reduction and right node raising, as mentioned below).
Even concerning the hierarchical structure of coordinated strings, there is much disagreement. Whether or not coordinate structures should be analyzed in terms of the basic tree conventions employed for subordination is an issue that divides experts. Broadly speaking, there are two options: either a flat or a layered analysis. There are two possibilities for the flat option, both of which are shown here. The a-trees represent the analyses in a constituency-based system, and the b-trees in a dependency-based system:
The first two trees present the traditionalexocentric analysis. The coordinate structure is deemed exocentric insofar as neither conjunct can be taken to be the sole head, but rather both conjuncts are deemed heads in a sense. The second two trees, where the coordinator is the head, are similar to the first two insofar as the conjuncts are equi-level sisters. These two flat analyses stand in contrast to the following three layered analyses. The constituency-based a-trees appear again on the left, and the dependency-based b-trees on the right:
The primary aspect of these layered analyses is that an attempt is being made to adapt the analysis of coordinate structures to the analysis ofsubordinate structures. The conjuncts in each case are not sister constituents, but rather the first conjunct is in a more prominent (higher) hierarchical position than the second conjunct. The three analyses differ with respect to the presumed head of the entire structure. The third option in terms of theX-bar schema cannot be rendered in terms of dependency because dependency allows a word to project just a single node. There is no way to capture the hierarchical distinction between specifiers and complements in a dependency-based system (but there is always a linear distinction, since specifiers precede complements).
The flat analysis has the benefit that it captures the intuition that coordinate structures are different from subordinate structures at a basic level. The drawback to the flat analysis, however, is that the theory of syntax must be augmented beyond what is necessary for standard subordinate structures. The layered analysis has the advantage that there is no need to augment the syntax with an additional principle of organization, but it has the disadvantage that it does not sufficiently accommodate the intuition that coordination is fundamentally different from subordination.
Most coordinate structures are like those just produced above; the coordinated strings are alike in syntactic category. There are a number of unique traits of coordination, however, that demonstrate that what can be coordinated is not limited to the standard syntactic categories. Each of the following subsections briefly draws attention to an unexpected aspect of coordination. These aspects are less than fully understood, despite the attention that coordination has received in theoretical syntax.
One coordinate structure can easily be nested inside another. However, this may result in ambiguity, as demonstrated by the following example.
The brackets indicate the three possible readings for the sentence. The (b)- and (c)-readings show one coordinate structure being embedded inside another. Which of the three readings is understood depends on intonation and context. The (b)-reading could be preferred in a situation where Bill and Sam arrived together, but Fred arrived separately. Similarly, the (c)-reading could be preferred in a situation where Fred and Bill arrived together, but Sam arrived separately. That the indicated groupings are indeed possible becomes evident whenor is employed:
A theory of coordination needs to be in a position to address nesting of this sort.
The examples above illustrate that the conjuncts are often alike in syntactic category.[3] There are, though, many instances of coordination where the coordinated strings are not alike, e.g.
Data like these have been explored in detail.[4] They illustrate that the theory of coordination should not rely too heavily on syntactic category to explain the fact that in most instances of coordination, the coordinated strings are alike. Syntactic function is more important, that is, the coordinated strings should be alike insyntactic function. In the former three sentences here, the coordinated strings are, ascomplements of the copulais,predicative expressions, and in the latter two sentences, the coordinated strings areadjuncts that are alike in syntactic function (temporal adjunct + temporal adjunct, causal adjunct + causal adjunct).
The aspect of coordination that is perhaps most vexing for theories of coordination concerns non-constituent conjuncts.[5] Coordination is, namely, not limited to coordinating just constituents, but is also capable of coordinating non-constituent strings:
While some of these coordinate structures require a non-standard intonation contour, they can all be acceptable. This situation is problematic for theories of syntax because most of the coordinated strings do not qualify as constituents. Hence since the constituent is widely assumed to be the fundamental unit of syntactic analysis, such data seem to require that the theory of coordination admit additional theoretical apparatus. Two examples of the sort of apparatus that has been posited are so-calledconjunction reduction andright node raising (RNR).[6][7] Conjunction reduction is an ellipsis mechanism that takes non-constituent conjuncts to be complete phrases or clauses at some deep level of syntax. These complete phrases or clauses are then reduced down to their surface appearance by the conjunction reduction mechanism. The traditional analysis of the phenomenon of right node raising assumed that in cases of non-constituent conjuncts, a shared string to the right of the conjuncts is raised out of VP in such a manner that the material in the conjuncts ends up as constituents. The plausibility of these mechanisms is NOT widely accepted as it can be argued that they aread hoc attempts to solve a problem that plagues theories that take the constituent to be the fundamental unit of syntactic analysis.
Coordination has been widely employed as a test or for the constituent status of a given string, i.e. as aconstituency test. In light of non-constituent conjuncts however, the helpfulness of coordination as a diagnostic for identifying constituents can be dubious.
Gapping (andstripping) is anellipsis mechanism that seems to occur in coordinate structures only. It usually excludes afinite verb from the second conjunct of a coordinate structure and allows further constituents to also be elided from the conjunct.[8] While gapping itself is widely acknowledged to involve ellipsis, which instances of coordination do and do not involve gapping is still a matter of debate.[9] Most theories of syntax agree that gapping is involved in the following cases. A subscript and a smaller font are used to indicate the "gapped" material:
Accounts of gapping and coordination disagree, however, concerning data such as the following:
The gapping analysis shown in the a-sentences is motivated above all by the desire to avoid the non-constituent conjuncts associated with the b-sentences. No consensus has been reached about which analysis is better.
Coordination is sensitive to the linear order of words, a fact that is evident with differences between forward and backward sharing. There is a limitation on material that precedes the conjuncts of a coordinate structure that does restrict the material that follows it:[10]
The star * indicates that the sentence is unacceptable in the language. Each of these coordinate structures is disallowed. The underline draws attention to a constituent that mostly precedes the coordinate structure but that the initial conjunct "cuts into". There is apparently a restriction on the constituents that mostly precede a coordinate structure. The same restriction does not limit similar constituents that mostly follow the coordinate structure:
The underline now marks a constituent that mostly follows the coordinate structure. Unlike with the first three examples, the coordinate structure in these three examples can cut into the underlined constituent.
InTransformational Grammar, the interaction of coordination and extraction (e.g.wh-fronting) has generated a lot of interest. TheCoordinate Structure Constraint is the property of coordinate structures that prevents extraction of a single conjunct or from a single conjunct. Coordinate structures are said to be strong islands for extraction.[11] For example:
These attempts at coordination fail because extraction cannot affect just one conjunct of a coordinate structure. If extraction occurs out of both conjuncts in a like fashion, however, the coordinate structure is acceptable. This trait of coordination is referred to as theAcross-the-Board Constraint.[12] For example:
There are other apparent exceptions to the Coordinate Structure Constraint and the Across-the-Board generalization, and their integration to existing syntactic theory has been a long-standing disciplinary desideratum.[13]
In pseudo-coordinative constructions, the coordinator, generallyand, appears to have a subordinating function. It occurs in many languages and is sometimes known as "hendiadys", and it is often, but not always, used to convey a pejorative or idiomatic connotation.[14] Among theGermanic languages, pseudo-coordination occurs in English, Afrikaans, Norwegian, Danish and Swedish.[15] Pseudo-coordination appears to be absent in Dutch and German. The pseudo-coordinative construction is limited to a few verbs. In English, these verbs are typicallygo,try, andsit. In other languages, typical pseudo-coordinative verbs and/or hendiadys predicates are egressive verbs (e.g.go) and verbs of body posture (e.g.sit,stand andlie down).
A typical property of pseudo-coordinative constructions is that, unlike ordinary coordination, they appear to violate the Across-the-Board extraction property (see above). In other words, it is possible to extract from one of the conjuncts.[16]
It has been argued that pseudo-coordination is not a unitary phenomenon. Even in a single language such as English, the predicatetry exhibits different pseudo-coordination properties to other predicates and other predicates such asgo andsit can instantiate a number of different pseudo-coordinative construction types.[17] On the other hand, it has been argued that at least some different types of pseudo-coordination can be analyzed using ordinary coordination as opposed to stipulating that pseudo-coordinativeand is a subordinator; the differences between the various constructions derive from the level of structure that is coordinated e.g. coordination of heads, coordination of VP, etc.
In Japanese, the particle とto, which can be translated asand in English, is used as a coordinator of nominals (a noun,noun phrase or any word that functions as a noun). It cannot be used to coordinate other word categories such as adjectives and verbs. Different word categories require different coordinators. We will discuss the basic use of these coordinators in Japanese.[18] Below is a simple example of nominal coordination in Japanese.
メアリー
Mary
Mary
[りんご-と
[ringo-to
[apple-and
バナナ]
banana]
banana]
買った
katta
bought
メアリー -は [りんご-と バナナ] -を 買った
Mary -wa [ringo-to banana] -o katta
Mary -TOP [apple-and banana] -ACC bought
Mary bought apples and bananas.
To can also be used to coordinate two conjuncts that are not syntactic constituents. In the example below, the conjuncts each include an indirect object, a direct object, and a quantifier.[19]
メアリー
Mary
Mary
[[トム-に
[[Tom-ni
[[Tom-to
[ボブ-に
[Bob-ni
[Bob-to
あげた
ageta
gave
メアリー -が {[[トム-に} りんご-を 二-つ]-と [ボブ-に バナナ-を 三-本]] あげた
Mary -ga {[[Tom-ni} ringo-o futa-tsu]-to [Bob-ni banana-o san-bon]] ageta
Mary -NOM {[[Tom-to} apple-ACC two-CL]-and [Bob-to banana-ACC three-CL]] gave
Mary gave two apples to Tom and three bananas to Bob.
There are two classes of adjectives in Japanese: i-adjectives and na-adjectives. The-te suffix will change according to the classes of the adjectives.
| Normal form | -Te form | |
|---|---|---|
| i-adjectives | 安い yasui 安い yasui | 安くて yasukute 安くて yasukute |
| na-adjectives | 安全な anzenna 安全な anzenna | 安全で anzende 安全で anzende |
When i-adjectives are in -te form, the final い-i is dropped and くて-kute is added as a suffix instead. On the contrary, when na-adjectives are in -te form, the final な-na is dropped and で-de is added as a suffix.
As we can see, instead of a particle, a suffix is added to the first adjective to show coordination of adjectives. Below is a simple example of adjectival coordination in Japanese. In (3), both adjectives are i-adjectives, while in (4) both adjectives are na-adjectives.
ラーメン
ramen
ramen
[安-くて
[yasu-kute
[cheap-and
美味しい]
oishii]
tasty]
ラーメン -は [安-くて 美味しい]
ramen -wa [yasu-kute oishii]
ramen -TOP [cheap-and tasty]
Ramen is cheap and tasty.
この
kono
this
道
michi
road
[安全-で
[anzen-de
[safe-and
綺麗だ]
kirei da]
beautiful]
この 道 -は [安全-で 綺麗だ]
kono michi -wa [anzen-de {kirei da}]
this road -TOP [safe-and beautiful]
This road is safe and beautiful.
There are three classes of verbs in Japanese: ru-verbs, u-verbs and irregular verbs. Similar to Japanese adjectives, the -te suffix will change because of the class of the verbs. The te-form of verbs is a lot more complicated than that of adjectives, for the purpose of this Wikipedia page, we will just discuss the coordinator how it's used in Japanese.[18]
メアリー
Mary
Mary
[食べ-て
[tabe-te
[ate-and
飲んだ]
nonda]
drank]
メアリー -は [食べ-て 飲んだ]
Mary -wa [tabe-te nonda]
Mary -TOP [ate-and drank]
Mary ate and drank.
InHausa,dà meansand in English, whilekóo meansor. It is used as a coordinator for nominals. Unlike Japanese, articlesdà andkóo can be used to coordinate other word categories like adjectives and nominalised verbs.[20] The number of nouns that can be conjoined todà is unlimited.[21] The tables below shows a simple example of simple nominal coordination in Hausa.[20]
Àbêokùtá
Abeokuta
dà/kóo
and/or
Àbúuja
Abuja
dà
and
Ilòor̃í
Ilorin
dà/kóo
and/or
Ìbàadàn
Ibadan
Àbêokùtá dà/kóo Àbúuja dà Ilòor̃í dà/kóo Ìbàadàn
Abeokuta and/or Abuja and Ilorin and/or Ibadan
Abeokuta and/or Abuja and Ilorin and/or Ibadan
Wánnàn
This
rìigáa
dress
dà
with
kálàa
colour
jáa
red
dà/kóo
and/or
kóor̃èe
green
Wánnàn rìigáa tánàà dà kálàa jáa dà/kóo kóor̃èe
This dress 3SG.F.PROG with colour red and/or green
This dress has red and green colour
Cîn
Eating
náamà-n
meat-of
àládèe
pig
dà
and
shân
drinking
gíyàa
beer
Cîn náamà-n àládèe dà shân gíyàa
Eating meat-of pig and drinking beer
Eating and drinking beer
VP sentences are coordinatedasyndetically. The table below show examples of this.[20]
Hàbîb
Habib
háu
climb
Mount Patti
Mount Patti
(*dà/kóo)
and/or
núunàa
show
mánà
us
kòogi-n
river-GEN
Íísà
Niger
(*dà/kóo)
and/or
gyáarà
repair
móotà
car
-r-
-GEN-
sà
his
Hàbîb yáa háu {Mount Patti} (*dà/kóo) yáa núunàa mánà kòogi-n Íísà (*dà/kóo) yáa gyáarà móotà -r- sà
Habib 3SG.M.PFV climb {Mount Patti} and/or 3SG.M.PFV show us river-GEN Niger and/or 3SG.M.PFV repair car -GEN- his
Habib has climbed Mount Patti, has showed use the river Niger, has repaired his car
Kóo can also only appear between the first and second, or the second and third conjunct. The tables below show examples of this.
Kóo
Either
Hàbîb
Habib
tàfí
travel
Lákwájà
Lokajal
kóo
or
tàfí
travel
Sákkwátó
Sokoto
Kóo Hàbîb yáa tàfí Lákwájà kóo yáa tàfí Sákkwátó
Either Habib 3SG.F.PROG. travel Lokajal or 3SG.F.PROG. travel Sokoto
Either Habib went to Lokoja or he went to Sokoto
Hàbîb
Habib
háu
climb
Mount Patti
Mount Patti
kóo
or
núunàa
show
mánà
us
kòogi-n
river-GEN
Íísà
Niger
kóo
or
gyáarà
repair
móotà-r-sà
car-GEN-his
Hàbîb yá háu {Mount Patti} kóo yáa núunàa mánà kòogi-n Íísà kóo yáa gyáarà móotà-r-sà
Habib 3SG.M.PFV.SBJV. climb {Mount Patti} or 3SG.M.PFV. show us river-GEN Niger or 3SG.M.PFV repair car-GEN-his
Habib climbed Mount Patti either to show us river Niger or to repair his car.
Standard Mandarin Chinese allowsfloating coordinators. Essentially, these consist of coordinators in the language that cannot appear to the left of or inside the firstconjunct. Instead, they may only appear between two conjuncts or inside the second.[22] This is demonstrated in the following table in which the floating coordinatorke(shi) may occur between the two conjuncts in the first example or inside the second conjunct in the second example. However, whenke(shi) appears inside the first conjunct, as in the third example, or to the left of the first conjunct, as in the fourth example, the sentence becomes ungrammatical.
Baoyu Baoyu yao want tiaowu, dance ke(shi) but wo I yao want hui- return- jia home Baoyu yao tiaowu, ke(shi) wo yao hui- jia Baoyu want dance but I want return- home Baoyu wants to dance but I want to return home |
Baoyu Baoyu yao want tiaowu, dance wo I ke(shi) but yao want hui- return- jia home Baoyu yao tiaowu, wo ke(shi) yao hui- jia Baoyu want dance I but want return- home Baoyu wants to dance but I want to return home |
*Baoyu *Baoyu ke(shi) but yao want tiaowu, dance wo I yao want hui- return- jia home *Baoyu ke(shi) yao tiaowu, wo yao hui- jia *Baoyu but want dance I want return- home |
*Ke(shi) *but Baoyu Baoyu yao want tiaowu, dance wo I yao want hui- return- jia home *Ke(shi) Baoyu yao tiaowu, wo yao hui- jia *but Baoyu want dance I want return- home |
The distribution of the coordinatoryu(shi), meaningand thus, bears some similarity to that ofke(shi) but restricts other coordinators from appearing before the conjunct in which it occurs.Yu(shi) may precede or follow the second conjunct but never precedes the first conjunct.[22]
Baoyu Baoyu yi once guli encourage yushi and Daiyu Daiyu huifu recover -le -PRF zixin confidence Baoyu yi guli yushi Daiyu huifu -le zixin Baoyu once encourage and Daiyu recover -PRF confidence Baoyu encouraged her, and thus Daiyu recovered her confidence |
Baoyu Baoyu yi once guli, encourage Daiyu Diayu yushi and huifu recover -le -PRF zixin confidence Baoyu yi guli, Daiyu yushi huifu -le zixin Baoyu once encourage Diayu and recover -PRF confidence Baoyu encouraged her, and thus Daiyu recovered her confidence |
(*yushi) and Baoyu Baoyu (*yushi) and yi one guli, encourage Daiyu Daiyu huifu recover -le -PRF zixin confidence (*yushi) Baoyu (*yushi) yi guli, Daiyu huifu -le zixin and Baoyu and one encourage Daiyu recover -PRF confidence |
Standard Mandarin Chinese also follows theLexical Integrity Hypothesis, which has an effect on syntactic coordination in the language. The second example shown below (marked with an asterisk) is ungrammatical because, as correctly predicted by the hypothesis, syntactic transformations are not applicable to word-internal structures. Thus, the second example shown below is not allowed and is thus marked with an asterisk.[23]
*Lisi shi yi ge [lu-jian-yi]-shi]N *Lisi shi yi ge [lu-jian-yi]-shi]N *Lisi AUX one CL law-and-heal-teacher |
However, it is important to note that Verb-Object compounds are an exception to this hypothesis. This is demonstrated in the following example in which the V-O formschi-hun andchi-su permit the coordination of the word-internal elementshun andsu, thereby not following the hypothesis.
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