Abstract
This paper discusses how collostructional analysis can be applied to the study of word-formation patterns. Drawing on a diachronic corpus study of German ung-nominalization and Infinitival Nominalization using the GerManC Corpus, it is shown that a cross-tabulation analysis comparing the frequencies of word-formation products to those of their respective bases can give valuable clues to the input language users rely on when abstracting a schema (i.e., a word-formation construction) from a quite heterogeneous array of instantiations.
Published Online: 2014-12-16
Published in Print: 2014-11-1
© 2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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Keywords for this article
construction morphology;
collostructional analysis;
German wordformation;
productivity
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Editorial
- Frames and constructions enhance text coherence: The case of DNI resolutions in spoken discourse
- Information status and English relative constructions: A corpus-based study of Japanese learners in spoken language
- Key is a llave is a Schlüssel: A failure to replicate an experiment from Boroditsky et al. 2003
- Illness-conceptions in the persuasive sections of Hungarian medical recipes from the 16th and 17th centuries
- Figurative processes in meaning interpretation: A case study of novel English compounds
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