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E-raamat: Collocations as a Language Resource: A functional and cognitive study in English phraseology

  • Formaat: 364 pages
  • Sari: Human Cognitive Processing 71
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Apr-2022
  • Kirjastus: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789027257987
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  • Formaat: 364 pages
  • Sari: Human Cognitive Processing 71
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Apr-2022
  • Kirjastus: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789027257987
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Are collocations problems or solutions to problems? If you take the perspective of the foreign learner, as in traditional phraseology, they are certainly challenging, and they have therefore been categorized as arbitrary, or even defective, deviations from an assumed norm of full compositionality. This is a paradox because their ubiquity in language and their importance for language proficiency are undisputed. The book provides a critical review of the traditional phraseological approach to collocations with its classical categories and its roots in structural and generative linguistics as well as traditional Russian phraseology. Instead, it proposes a theory of collocations as an independent functional domain, no longer characterized as “odd comings-together of words” that are neither fully compositional nor fully idiomatic. It fills a research gap and should appeal to phraseologists and cognitive linguists as well as psycholinguists, neurolinguists, corpus linguists, PhD-students and other advanced students of linguistics who are interested in exploring collocations as a language resource and may be interested in contributing to it.
Preface and acknowledgements ix
List of figures
xiii
List of tables
xv
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(26)
1.1 An outline of the traditional phraseological approach to collocations
2(2)
1.2 What is a collocation'?
4(3)
1.3 Problems of categorization in the traditional approach
7(5)
1.4 Motivation for a functional and cognitive approach
12(6)
1.5 What should a theory of collocations account for?
18(7)
1.6 A brief overview of the book
25(2)
Chapter 2 The foundations of the phraseological approach
27(62)
2.1 Theoretical influences on phraseology
28(36)
2.1.1 A practical concern: Teaching English as a foreign language
28(2)
2.1.2 Firthian linguistics
30(8)
2.1.3 Underlying assumptions
38(1)
2.1.3.1 Structuralist dichotomies
39(3)
2.1.3.2 Generative principles
42(3)
2.1.3.3 Classical categories
45(2)
2.1.4 Russian phraseology
47(3)
2.1.5 A cognitive strand
50(14)
2.2 The categorization of collocations in the phraseological approach
64(22)
2.2.1 Collocations as syntactic units
64(2)
2.2.2 Institutionalization
66(4)
2.2.3 The absence of full compositionality
70(4)
2.2.4 Restricted compositionality as a criterial feature
74(6)
2.2.5 Analysability, compositionality, and the literal/figurative distinction
80(6)
2.3 Summary and conclusions
86(3)
Chapter 3 Collocations in a functional and cognitive framework
89(204)
3.1 What is `cognitive' and what is `functional' about language?
89(9)
3.2 Methodological issues
98(33)
3.2.1 Corpus studies, frequency, and prototypicality
99(8)
3.2.2 Linguistic evidence of cognitive routines
107(22)
3.2.3 Synchronic evidence of diachronic processes
129(2)
3.3 Introduction to the empirical part
131(3)
3.3.1 Research questions and motivation
131(1)
3.3.2 Design of case study
132(1)
3.3.3 A general presentation of the data
133(1)
3.4 Case study: Break an appointment
134(144)
3.4.1 How to approach the analysis of a complex category
135(1)
3.4.1.1 How many meanings does a word have?
135(9)
3.4.1.2 Domains, image schemas, and construction types
144(2)
3.4.2 The internal structure of break
146(2)
3.4.2.1 Abstract domains and referential range
148(8)
3.4.2.2 Image schemas and event-structure
156(11)
3.4.2.3 Construction types
167(8)
3.4.2.4 How many meanings does break have?
175(26)
3.4.3 The internal structure of appointment
201(2)
3.4.3.1 Abstract domains and referential range
203(6)
3.4.3.2 Lexical sets, basic-level categories, and domains of variation
209(7)
3.4.3.3 Image schemas and event-structure
216(6)
3.4.3.4 Construction types
222(7)
3.4.3.5 How many meanings does appointment have?
229(10)
3.4.4 The integration of break and appointment
239(1)
3.4.4.1 Break an appointment as a composite structure
240(6)
3.4.4.2 Evidence of entrenchment
246(11)
3.4.4.3 Can a support-verb function be posited for break?
257(9)
3.4.4.4 Is break as a support verb grammaticalized?
266(12)
3.5 Summary of findings related to research questions
278(15)
3.5.1 To what extent are conventional and entrenched collocations like other composite structures?
278(6)
3.5.2 In what respects are conventional and entrenched collocations special?
284(1)
3.5.3 Can conventional and entrenched collocations be characterized in terms of salience?
285(2)
3.5.4 Do verbs in conventional and entrenched collocations function as support verbs, and does this imply grammaticalization?
287(3)
3.5.5 Concluding remarks on research questions
290(3)
Chapter 4 Collocations as a language resource: Winding up
293(16)
4.1 Evaluation of methodology
294(6)
4.2 Theoretical implications
300(4)
4.3 Much more to do
304(5)
References 309(18)
Name index 327(4)
Subject index 331