Publication | Open Access
Incorporating the multi-level nature of the constructicon into hypothesis testing
23
Citations
34
References
2021
Year
CognitionSemanticsSyntactic StructureCorpus LinguisticsSocial SciencesApplied LinguisticsMulti-level NatureSyntaxLanguage DocumentationIntermediate LevelComputational LinguisticsTest DerivationExperimental TestingApplied MeasurementGrammarCorpus AnalysisLanguage StudiesTestabilityStatisticsMachine TranslationCognitive ScienceGrammatical FormalismTesting TechniqueExperimental PsychologyCategorial GrammarReasoningDutch Naar -AlternationSoftware TestingUnderstanding Language VariationFormal SyntaxLinguistics
Abstract Construction grammar organizes its basic elements of description, its constructions, into networks that range from concrete, lexically-filled constructions to fully schematic ones, with several levels of partially schematic constructions in between. However, only few corpus studies with a constructionist background take this multi-level nature fully into account. In this paper, we argue that understanding language variation can be advanced considerably by systematically formulating and testing hypotheses at various levels in the constructional network. To illustrate the approach, we present a corpus study of the Dutch naar -alternation. It is found that this alternation primarily functions at an intermediate level in the constructional network.
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