History of Grammar
History of Grammar
History of Grammar
MAEd- English
History of Grammar
Grammar – it was derived from the Greek word “grammatikĕ”, when “gram” means
something written, and “tikĕ” derives from the word “technĕ” which means art. Hence grammar
is the art of writing.
In ancient Greece and Rome the terms grammatikĕ and grammatica respectively denoted the
whole apparatus of literal study.
In the middle ages, grammar was the study of Latin.
The first grammar of English – “Bref Grammar for English” was published in 1585 by William
Bullokar.
The most influential grammar of English which is published in 1762 was R. Lowth’s “Short
Introduction to English Grammar”. It started the age of Prescriptive Grammar
To a prescriptive grammarian, grammar is rules of correct usage. It aims to prescribe what is
judged to be correct rather than to describe actual usage.
A new modern understanding of grammar appeared only by the end of the 19 th century wherein
the period of scientific (descriptive) grammar began.
Patterning after Latin in classifying words into word classes and establishing
grammatical categories;
Reliance on meaning and function in definitions;
Approach to correctness: the standards of correctness are logic, which was identified
with Latin, and the past.
Emphasis on writing rather than speech.
Prescriptive grammarians could be called the first standardizers of English, unfortunately
their standardization work was often based on subjective criteria and other languages.
However, those works written in the prescriptive era which did not ignored actual usage
paved way to standard English, which has today become an objective standard for
correct English. Those grammarians who adhere the norms of standard English (the
English of government, education, broadcasting, news publishing, and other public
discourse) are also prescriptivists in a good sense.
Non-Structural Descriptive Grammar (between 1900-1930)
-Henry Sweet was the first to introduce the term scientific grammar meaning reliance on
facts and the use if the inductive method, to undermine the old tradition in linguistic studies
where the function of grammar was to prescribe what is judged to be correct grather than
describe its actual usage.
Grammatical analysis (grammatical parse). The process of correlating the line sequence
of lexemes (words) of the language with its formal grammar. The result of this is usually a parse
tree or an abstract syntactical tree. It is explained by that the grammars of more general types in
Homsky's hierarchy (context-dependent and, moreover, unlimited) are much more difficult to be
analyzed, and simpler grammars (regular grammars) do not allow you to describe the
embedded language constructions and thus are not enough expressive.
Grammatical parse methods can be divided into two large classes - ascending and
descending - according to the order of building the parse tree. Descending methods (top-down
methods) begin with the grammar rule defining the purpose of analysis from the parse tree's
root and try to develop it so that the following tree's nodes correspond the syntax of the
sentence being analyzed. Ascending methods (bottom-up methods) begin from the final parse
tree's nodes and try to unite them by building nodes of higher and higher levels till the tree's
root is reached. (https://www.viva64.com/en/t/0016/)