In this article, we introduce the effect of “constructional contamination”. In constructional contamination, a subset of the instances of a target construction deviate in their realization, due to a superficial resemblance they share with instances of a contaminating construction. We claim that this contaminating effect bears testimony to the hypothesis that language users do not always execute a full parse while interpreting and producing sentences. Instead, they may rely on what has been called “shallow parsing”, i.e., chunking the utterances into large, unanalyzed exemplars that may extend across constituent borders. We propose several measures to quantify constructional contamination in corpus data. To evaluate these measures, the Dutch...
In this article we showcase the relevance of corpus evidence in examining potential differences in e...
peer reviewedConstruction grammar organizes its basic elements of description, its constructions, in...
In a paper entitled “Against markedness (and what to replace it with)”, Haspelmath argues “that the ...
peer reviewedIn every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasio...
peer reviewedIn a traditional view of language processing, language users fully analyze a sentence t...
In every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasionally give ri...
The construction, as a successor to the Saussurian sign, is usually envisaged as a discrete form-mea...
editorial reviewedConstructions are often defined as form-function pairings. The underlying assumpti...
Constructions that are structurally unrelated, occasionally give rise to strings that are superficia...
Deflection has been rampaging in the history of Dutch, but in this long-term process, the genitive p...
peer reviewedPhonological resemblance can exert an influence on two constructions leading them to co...
peer reviewedLectal contamination is the language-external counterpart of what has been described as...
peer reviewedPresent-day Dutch has a vestigial partitive genitive morpheme. Adjectives take the geni...
peer reviewedThis paper presents evidence from both corpora and agent-based simulation for the effec...
The paper demonstrates how verb and noun classes can be used as a common interface in contrastive Co...
In this article we showcase the relevance of corpus evidence in examining potential differences in e...
peer reviewedConstruction grammar organizes its basic elements of description, its constructions, in...
In a paper entitled “Against markedness (and what to replace it with)”, Haspelmath argues “that the ...
peer reviewedIn every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasio...
peer reviewedIn a traditional view of language processing, language users fully analyze a sentence t...
In every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasionally give ri...
The construction, as a successor to the Saussurian sign, is usually envisaged as a discrete form-mea...
editorial reviewedConstructions are often defined as form-function pairings. The underlying assumpti...
Constructions that are structurally unrelated, occasionally give rise to strings that are superficia...
Deflection has been rampaging in the history of Dutch, but in this long-term process, the genitive p...
peer reviewedPhonological resemblance can exert an influence on two constructions leading them to co...
peer reviewedLectal contamination is the language-external counterpart of what has been described as...
peer reviewedPresent-day Dutch has a vestigial partitive genitive morpheme. Adjectives take the geni...
peer reviewedThis paper presents evidence from both corpora and agent-based simulation for the effec...
The paper demonstrates how verb and noun classes can be used as a common interface in contrastive Co...
In this article we showcase the relevance of corpus evidence in examining potential differences in e...
peer reviewedConstruction grammar organizes its basic elements of description, its constructions, in...
In a paper entitled “Against markedness (and what to replace it with)”, Haspelmath argues “that the ...