Approaching collocations from a usage-based perspective, this study investigates how the development of collocational proficiency in first and second language attainment could be explained. Against the background of recent approaches in cognitive linguistics such as construction grammar and Complex Adaptive Systems it argues that collocations should not be regarded as idiosyncratic phraseological items, which, depending on their degree of fixedness and semantic opaqueness, can be classified along a gradient of idiomaticity. Thus, this study regards collocations as dynamic linguistic phenomena, which could be seen as subject to constant change rather than more or less static combinations with an additional level of syntagmatic and paradigmatic restrictions. Furthermore it explores how creative changes and alternations of collocations can be used to learn more about a speakers cognitive processing of these phraseological phenomena and how this process might be influenced by language external factors such as age, education or context.
A Fate of Flame
Tessonja Odette
audiobookBeating Burnout at Work : Why Teams Hold the Secret to Well-Being and Resilience
Paula Davis
audiobookThe Kybalion
The Three Initiates
bookThe Off-Limits Rule
Sarah Adams
audiobookForgive Me
Susan Lewis
audiobookThe Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim Official Companion
Chris Smith
audiobookSecrets and Sins: Gabriel
Naima Simone
audiobook