Three models for the description of language
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The grammar of a language is a device that describes the structure of that language. The grammar is comprised of a set of rules whose goal is twofold: first these rules can be used to create sentences of the associated language and only these, and second they can be used to classify whether a given sentence is an element of the language or not. The goal of a linguist is to discover grammars that are simple and yet are able to fully span the language. In [1] Chomsky describes three possible options of increasing complexity for English grammars: Finite-state, Phrase Structure and Transformational. This paper briefly present these three grammars and summarizes Chomsky’s analysis and results which state that finite-state grammars are inadequate because they fail to span all possible sentences of the English language, and phrase structure grammar is overly complex.
[1] Claude E. Shannon,et al. Prediction and Entropy of Printed English , 1951 .
[2] Noam Chomsky,et al. Three models for the description of language , 1956, IRE Trans. Inf. Theory.