This paper addresses the question of where and how to cover linguistic patterns that do not quite belong either to the domain of lexicon or that of grammar. We present some examples of such constructions and introduce the notion of a Constructicon, as a complementary kind of resource to dictionaries and grammars, to account for them. We also examine the treatment of these example constructions in Swedish dictionaries, and discuss to what extent they can and should be treated there
It has sometimes been claimed that dictionaries which reflect the mental lexicon as faithfully as po...
digtil/ ngt ('guilty of something') - very often cause serious translation problems, atleast to non-...
One of the major problems of LSP lexicography is connected with the fäet that analphabetic macrostru...
The framework of the discussion about the role of grammar in dictionaries changescontinuously: new g...
In traditional dictionaries, phrases and phrasemes are listed under one of the lexical units occurri...
This article studies how Swedish aspectual constructions are represented in two dictionaries (Svensk...
The Swedish Constructicon (SweCcn) is developed as a multi-purpose database, including an aim to cov...
The paper presents a study of how unique constituents, by which I mean independentlexemes that occur...
Monolingual dictionaries are by their very nature truly defining, unlike bilingual ( ormultilingual)...
This article explores how four schematic multi-word constructions are covered in the monolingual doc...
The Scandinavian languages have nearly unlimited possibilities to form compounds. When working with ...
Although the relative lexical frequency of proper nouns is 10 to 15 per cent of the vocabulary in mo...
Against the background of the extensive use of language corpora in the dictionary-making industri of...
One of the new features of Lexin is the concept of a common data-base used to serve several dictiona...
In 1862–67 Johan Ernst Rietz published a dictionary of Swedish dialects, which comprised nearly 860 ...
It has sometimes been claimed that dictionaries which reflect the mental lexicon as faithfully as po...
digtil/ ngt ('guilty of something') - very often cause serious translation problems, atleast to non-...
One of the major problems of LSP lexicography is connected with the fäet that analphabetic macrostru...
The framework of the discussion about the role of grammar in dictionaries changescontinuously: new g...
In traditional dictionaries, phrases and phrasemes are listed under one of the lexical units occurri...
This article studies how Swedish aspectual constructions are represented in two dictionaries (Svensk...
The Swedish Constructicon (SweCcn) is developed as a multi-purpose database, including an aim to cov...
The paper presents a study of how unique constituents, by which I mean independentlexemes that occur...
Monolingual dictionaries are by their very nature truly defining, unlike bilingual ( ormultilingual)...
This article explores how four schematic multi-word constructions are covered in the monolingual doc...
The Scandinavian languages have nearly unlimited possibilities to form compounds. When working with ...
Although the relative lexical frequency of proper nouns is 10 to 15 per cent of the vocabulary in mo...
Against the background of the extensive use of language corpora in the dictionary-making industri of...
One of the new features of Lexin is the concept of a common data-base used to serve several dictiona...
In 1862–67 Johan Ernst Rietz published a dictionary of Swedish dialects, which comprised nearly 860 ...
It has sometimes been claimed that dictionaries which reflect the mental lexicon as faithfully as po...
digtil/ ngt ('guilty of something') - very often cause serious translation problems, atleast to non-...
One of the major problems of LSP lexicography is connected with the fäet that analphabetic macrostru...