Sentence word

A sentence word (also called a one-word sentence) is a single word that forms a full sentence.

Henry Sweet described sentence words as "a variety of words which have the peculiarity of always forming a sentence by themselves" and gave words such as "Come!", "John!", "Alas!", "Yes." and "No." as examples of sentence words.[1] The Dutch linguist J. M. Hoogvliet described sentence words as "volzinwoorden".[2] They were also noted in 1891 by Georg von der Gabelentz, whose observations were extensively elaborated by Hoogvliet in 1903 and he does not list "Yes." and "No." as sentence words. Wegener called sentence words "Wortsätze".[3]

Single-word utterances and child language acquisition

One of the predominant questions concerning children and language acquisition deals with the relation between the perception and the production of a child's word usage. It is difficult to understand what a child understands about the words that they are using and what the desired outcome or goal of the utterance should be.[4]

Holophrases are defined as a "single-word utterance which is used by a child to express more than one meaning usually attributed to that single word by adults."[5] The holophrastic hypothesis argues that children use single words to refer to different meanings in the same way an adult would represent those meanings by using an entire sentence or phrase. There are two opposing hypotheses as to whether holophrases are structural or functional in children. The two hypotheses are outlined below.

Structural holophrastic hypothesis

The structural version argues that children’s “single word utterances are implicit expressions of syntactic and semantic structural relations.” There are three arguments used to account for the structural version of the holophrastic hypothesis: The comprehension argument, the temporal proximity argument, and the progressive acquisition argument.[5]

  1. Child: "Daddy" (holding pair of fathers pants)
  1. Child: "Bai" ('bai' is the term the child uses for any item of clothing)

The usage of 'Daddy' and 'Bai' used in close proximity are seen to represent a child's knowledge of linguistic relations; in this case the relation is the 'possessive'.[6] This argument is seen as having insufficient evidence as it is possible that the child is only switching from one way to conceptualize pants to another. It is also pointed out that if the child had knowledge of linguistic relationships between words, then the child would combine the words together, instead of using them separately.[5]

Functional holophrastic hypothesis

Functionalists doubt whether children really have structural knowledge, and argue that children rely on gestures to carry meaning (such as declarative, interrogative, exclamative or vocative). There are three arguments used to account for the functional version of the holophrastic hypothesis: The intonation argument, the gesture argument, and the predication argument.[5]

  1. Child: "Ball." (flat intonation) - Can mean "That is a ball."
  2. Child: "Ball?" (rising inflection) - Can mean "Where is the ball?"
However, it has been noted by Lois Bloom that there is no evidence that a child intends for intonation to be contrastive, it is only that adults are able to interpret it as such.[10] Martyn Barrett contrasts this with a longitudinal study performed by him, where he illustrated the acquisition of a rising inflection by a girl who was a year and a half old. Although she started out using intonation randomly, upon acquisition of the term "What's that" she began to use rising intonation exclusively for questions, suggesting knowledge of its contrastive usage.[11]
  1. Child: "Milk." (points at milk jug) - could mean “That is milk.”
  2. Child: "Milk." (open-handed gesture while reaching for a glass of milk) - could mean “I want milk.”
Each use of the word 'milk' in the examples above could have no use of intonation, or a random use of intonation, and so meaning is reliant on gesture. Anne Carter observed, however, that in the early stages of word acquisition children use gestures primarily to communicate, with words merely serving to intensify the message.[12] As children move onto multi-word speech, content and context are also used alongside gesture.

Single-word utterances and adult usage

While children use sentence words as a default strategy due to lack of syntax and lexicon, adults tend to use sentence words in a more specialized way, generally in a specific context or to convey a certain meaning. Because of this distinction, single word utterances in children are called 'holophrases', while in adults, they are called 'sentence words'. In both the child and adult use of sentence words, context is very important and relative to the word chosen, and the intended meaning.

Sentence word formation

Many sentence words have formed from the process of devaluation and semantic erosion. Various phrases in various languages have devolved into the words for "yes" and "no" (which can be found discussed in detail in yes and no), and these include expletive sentence words such as "Well!" and the French word "Ben!" (a parallel to "Bien!").[14]

However, not all word sentences suffer from this loss of lexical meaning. A subset of sentence words, which Fonagy calls "nominal phrases", exist that retain their lexical meaning. These exist in Uralic languages, and are the remainders of an archaic syntax wherein there were no explicit markers for nouns and verbs. An example of this is the Hungarian language "Fecske!", which transliterates as "Swallow!", but which has to be idiomatically translated with multiple words "Look! A swallow!" for rendering the proper meaning of the original, which to a native Hungarian speaker is neither elliptical nor emphatic. Such nominal phrase word sentences occur in English as well, particularly in telegraphese or as the rôte questions that are posed to fill in form data (e.g. "Name?", "Age?").[14]

Sentence word syntax

A sentence word involves invisible covert syntax and visible overt syntax. The invisible section or "covert" is the syntax that is removed in order to form a one word sentence. The visible section or "overt" is the syntax that still remains in a sentence word.[15] Within sentence word syntax there are 4 different clause-types: Declarative (making a declaration), exclamative (making an exclamation), vocative (relating to a noun), and imperative (a command).

Sentence Word Syntax Examples
Overt Covert
Declarative 'That is excellent!' 'Excellent!'
Exclamative 'That was rude!' 'Rude!'
Vocative 'There is Mary!' 'Mary!'
Imperative 'You should leave!' 'Leave!'
Locative 'The chair is here.' 'Here.'
Interrogative 'Where is it?' 'Where?'

The words in bold above demonstrate that in the overt syntax structures, there are words that can be omitted in order to form a covert sentence word.

Distribution cross-linguistically

Other languages use sentence words as well.

Japanese Word "はい" (/haɪ/) 'Yes'
High tone pitch Mid tone pitch Low tone pitch
Command attention Represent an answer to roll-call Signify acquiescence acceptance of something reluctantly

References

  1. Henry Sweet (1900). "Adverbs". A New English Grammar. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 127. ISBN 1-4021-5375-9.
  2. Jan Noordegraaf (2001). "J. M. Hoogvliet as a teacher and theoretician". In Marcel Bax, C. Jan-Wouter Zwart, and A. J. van Essen. Reflections on Language and Language Learning. John Benjamins B.V. p. 24. ISBN 90-272-2584-2.
  3. Giorgio Graffi (2001). 200 Years of Syntax. John Benjamins B.V. p. 121. ISBN 1-58811-052-4.
  4. Hoff, Erika (2009). Language Development. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning. p. 167.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Barrett, Martyn, J. (1982). "The holophrastic hypothesis: Conceptual and empirical issues". Cognition 11: 47–76. doi:10.1016/0010-0277(82)90004-x.
  6. Rodgon, M.M. (1976). Single word usage, cognitive development and the beginnings of combinatorial speech. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  7. Dore, J. (1975). "Holophrases, speech acts and language universals.". Journal of child language 2: 21–40. doi:10.1017/s0305000900000878.
  8. Leopold, W.F. (1939). Speech Development of a Bilingual Child: A Linguist’s Record. Volume 1: Vocabulary growth in the first two years. Evanston, ill: Northwestern University Press.
  9. Von Raffler Engel, W. (1973). "The development from sound to phoneme in child language.". Studies of Child Language Development.
  10. Bloom, Lois (1973). One word at a time: The use of single word utterances before syntax. The Hague: Mouton.
  11. Barrett, M.D (1979). Semantic Development during the Single-Word Stage of Language Acquisition (Unpublished doctoral thesis).
  12. Carter, Anne :L. (1979). "Prespeech meaning relations an outline of one infant's sensorimotor morpheme development". Language Acquisition: 71–92.
  13. David, McNeill (1970). The Acquisition of Language: The Study of Developmental Psycholinguistics.
  14. 1 2 Ivan Fonagy (2001). Languages Within Language. John Benjamins B.V. p. 66. ISBN 0-927232-82-0.
  15. Carnie, Andrew (2012). Syntax: a generative introduction. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 496.
  16. 1 2 Hirst, D. (1998). Intonation systems: a survey of twenty languages. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. p. 372.
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