In every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasionally give rise to strings that look very similar on the surface. As a result of this superficial resemblance, a subset of instances of one of these constructions may deviate in the probabilistic preference for either of several possible formal variants. This effect is called ‘constructional contamination’, and was introduced in Pijpops and Van de Velde (2016). Constructional contamination bears testimony to the hypothesis that language users do not always execute a full parse of the utterances they interpret, but instead often rely on ‘shallow parsing’ and the storage of large, unanalyzed chunks of language in memory, as proposed in Ferreira, Bailey and ...
Germanic preterite morphology has been the subject of a bewildering number of studies, looking espec...
Contagious morphosyntax Constructions can be morphosyntactically contaminated by neighbouring const...
Dutch is well-known for its verb clusters, i.e. constructions in which multiple verbs group together...
peer reviewedIn every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasio...
In every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasionally give ri...
Constructions that are structurally unrelated, occasionally give rise to strings that are superficia...
editorial reviewedConstructions are often defined as form-function pairings. The underlying assumpti...
In this article, we introduce the effect of “constructional contamination”. In constructional contam...
Deflection has been rampaging in the history of Dutch, but in this long-term process, the genitive p...
The construction, as a successor to the Saussurian sign, is usually envisaged as a discrete form-mea...
peer reviewedLectal contamination is the language-external counterpart of what has been described as...
peer reviewedPhonological resemblance can exert an influence on two constructions leading them to co...
Present-day Dutch has a vestigial partitive genitive morpheme. Adjectives take the genitive -s morph...
peer reviewedIn a traditional view of language processing, language users fully analyze a sentence t...
Although sentence final verbal clusters in dialects of Dutch demonstrate a large amount of variation...
Germanic preterite morphology has been the subject of a bewildering number of studies, looking espec...
Contagious morphosyntax Constructions can be morphosyntactically contaminated by neighbouring const...
Dutch is well-known for its verb clusters, i.e. constructions in which multiple verbs group together...
peer reviewedIn every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasio...
In every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasionally give ri...
Constructions that are structurally unrelated, occasionally give rise to strings that are superficia...
editorial reviewedConstructions are often defined as form-function pairings. The underlying assumpti...
In this article, we introduce the effect of “constructional contamination”. In constructional contam...
Deflection has been rampaging in the history of Dutch, but in this long-term process, the genitive p...
The construction, as a successor to the Saussurian sign, is usually envisaged as a discrete form-mea...
peer reviewedLectal contamination is the language-external counterpart of what has been described as...
peer reviewedPhonological resemblance can exert an influence on two constructions leading them to co...
Present-day Dutch has a vestigial partitive genitive morpheme. Adjectives take the genitive -s morph...
peer reviewedIn a traditional view of language processing, language users fully analyze a sentence t...
Although sentence final verbal clusters in dialects of Dutch demonstrate a large amount of variation...
Germanic preterite morphology has been the subject of a bewildering number of studies, looking espec...
Contagious morphosyntax Constructions can be morphosyntactically contaminated by neighbouring const...
Dutch is well-known for its verb clusters, i.e. constructions in which multiple verbs group together...