Structure preservation principle
id:
structure-preservation-principle-310-3941547
title:
Structure preservation principle
text:
The Structure Preservation Principle is a generalization going back to Joseph Emonds' 1970 MIT dissertation and widely adopted afterwards. It claims, in a nutshell, that the result of syntactic transformation must be structurally identical to a structure that can be generated without transformations. For example, the by then popular passive transformation derives from the active But the syntactic structure of the passive sentence, Subj Aux V-Particple Prep NP is by and large the same as that fou
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wiki
category slug:
encyclopedia
description:
original url:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structure_preservation_principle
date created:
date modified:
2021-12-17T21:59:43Z
main entity:
{"identifier":"Q7625155","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q7625155"}
image:
fields total:
13
integrity:
13