These exercises draw on the C2 insight that syntactic ambiguities behave differently across languages — explore how gender, inflection, and structure disambiguate meaning in ways English often cannot.
→ See the course : Syntactic ambiguities in English : complete course
Exercice 1 — Identifying Syntactic Ambiguity
Choose the answer that best explains why each English sentence is syntactically ambiguous at C2 level.
- The sentence 'I saw the man with the telescope' is ambiguous because:
- Which feature of French most reliably resolves the kind of nominal ambiguity that English leaves open in a sentence like 'The teacher praised the student's work as expected'?
- In the sentence 'Visiting relatives can be boring', the ambiguity arises from:
- Why does English inflection fail to resolve the ambiguity in 'The professors questioned the students thought were responsible'?
Correction
- B) The prepositional phrase 'with the telescope' can modify either 'saw' or 'the man'.
- B) French gender agreement on adjectives and determiners clarifies which noun a modifier attaches to.
- C) The gerund 'visiting' functioning as either a verb in a reduced clause or a pre-nominal adjective.
- B) English nouns carry no case marking, so it is impossible to determine whether 'the students' is the object of 'questioned' or the subject of 'thought'.
Exercice 2 — Matching Ambiguity Types to Examples
Match each ambiguous English sentence on the left with the correct type of syntactic ambiguity on the right. Write the full label as your answer.
- Sentence: 'She decided on the boat.' — Match this to its ambiguity type.
- Sentence: 'Every student loves a teacher.' — Match this to its ambiguity type.
- Sentence: 'The horse raced past the barn fell.' — Match this to its ambiguity type.
- Sentence: 'I went to the bank.' (in a context where both a financial institution and a riverbank are relevant) — Match this to its ambiguity type.
Correction
- PP-attachment ambiguity — a prepositional phrase can modify two different constituents
- Scope ambiguity — a quantifier or negation can take wide or narrow scope
- Garden-path ambiguity — the parser initially commits to an incorrect syntactic structure
- Lexical ambiguity — a single word carries two unrelated meanings
Exercice 3 — Advanced Metalinguistic Gap-Fill
Complete each sentence with the precise linguistic term or phrase that fits the C2-level discussion of syntactic ambiguity, inflection, and cross-linguistic contrast. Write the full corrected sentence as your answer.
- Because English nouns lack ___, the syntactic role of a noun phrase — whether it acts as subject or object — must be inferred almost entirely from word order.
- In French, the obligatory ___ between a determiner and its head noun immediately signals the grammatical gender of that noun, a cue that English determiners such as 'the' simply do not provide.
- A ___ sentence is one in which the reader initially assigns an incorrect syntactic structure because the grammar temporarily permits two competing analyses before additional input forces a revision.
- When a single surface string maps onto two distinct underlying ___, linguists say the sentence exhibits structural — rather than merely lexical — ambiguity.
Correction
- Because English nouns lack morphological case marking, the syntactic role of a noun phrase — whether it acts as subject or object — must be inferred almost entirely from word order.
- In French, the obligatory agreement between a determiner and its head noun immediately signals the grammatical gender of that noun, a cue that English determiners such as 'the' simply do not provide.
- A garden-path sentence is one in which the reader initially assigns an incorrect syntactic structure because the grammar temporarily permits two competing analyses before additional input forces a revision.
- When a single surface string maps onto two distinct underlying phrase-structure representations, linguists say the sentence exhibits structural — rather than merely lexical — ambiguity.
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