• Title of article

    Incorporating Structural Diversity In The Malay Grammar

  • Author/Authors

    Ahmad, Zaharani Hankuk University of Foreign Studies - College of Interpretation and Translation - Department of Malay-Indonesian Interpretation and Translation, Korea , Jalaluddin, Nor Hashimah Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia - Fakulti Sains Sosial dan Kemanusiaan - Pusat Pengajian Bahasa dan Linguistik, Malaysia

  • From page
    17
  • To page
    34
  • Abstract
    The underlying thesis of transformational generative grammar is that a grammar consists of a set of rules that governs the formation of linguistics structures and constructions. The rules are formulated based on regular patterns that are observable in the language under study. As a natural language, regularities in Malay are not homogeneous and uniform, and their realizations most often surface in various or diverse structures and constructions. Some of these structural variations are considered ungrammatical because their derivations are violating the standard rule prescribed by the grammar. Nevertheless, the so-called incorrect variants are widely and productively used as attested in the corpus, and significantly has an impact on language learning. It has been reported that students are more inclined to use the incorrect variant as compared to the standard one, and this accordingly affects their grade in the examinations (Nor Hashimah et al., 2004). The issue that arises here is that there is a disagreement between the rules prescribed in the school grammar and the language used by the community outside the school. This paper argues that structural diversity in the language must be recognized, and the regularity patterning the variant needs to be generalized and formalized into rule. If the formation of the so-called incorrect variant is rule-governed, it must be accepted as well-formed and should be incorporated into the grammar
  • Keywords
    Corpus , Diversity , Grammaticality , Redundancy , Rule
  • Journal title
    GEMA Online Journal of Language Studies
  • Journal title
    GEMA Online Journal of Language Studies
  • Record number

    2648598