Multifactorial Analysis in Corpus Linguistics: A Study of Particle PlacementThis book presents a new analysis of the word-order alternation of English transitive phrasal verbs (aka Particle Movement) from a cognitive-functional and psycholinguistic perspective. Its main objective, however, is a methodological one, namely to demonstrate the superiority of corpus-based, multifactorial and probabilistic approaches towards grammatical phenomena over traditional analyses based on acceptability judgements and minimal pair tests. |
Contents
1 | |
12 | |
3 Objectives of this study | 44 |
4 Key notions and hypotheses | 48 |
5 The data | 67 |
6 Results and discussion | 79 |
7 General discussion | 132 |
8 The activation of constructions | 157 |
9 Conclusion and outlook | 185 |
10 Appendices | 192 |
11 References | 211 |
223 | |
225 | |
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Common terms and phrases
activation levels ACTPC ANIMACY argued basis British National Corpus causal Chapter choice of construction clauses cognitive Column totals complex concepts CONCRETE constituents Construction Grammar constructions relative context corpus data corpus linguistics definite determiners direct object direct object's referent directional adverbial discourse-functional variables discriminant analysis discriminant score discussed DISFLUENCY Distribution of constructions English entrenchment hierarchy Figure Fraser Fred picked frequency Givón Hawkins Hawkins's hearer IAMs idiomatic instances Interaction plot investigated John picked language length lexical linguistic literal MacWhinney meaning minimal pairs monofactorial morphosyntactic variables multifactorial namely native speakers nodes noun phrase particle placement phonological phrasal verb prediction accuracy preference for construction Preposition Stranding prepositional processing cost processing effort Processing Hypothesis pronominal pronoun prototype psycholinguistic sentences statistical stress struction structural priming syntactic variation Table tion TOPM TPVs TYPE utterance values/levels verb phrase word order