This paper revisits the notions of lexical category and category change from a constructionist perspective. I distinguish between four processes of category change (affixal derivation, conversion, transposition and reanalysis) and demonstrate how these category-changing processes can be analyzed in the framework of Construction Grammar. More particularly, it will be claimed that lexical categories can be understood as abstract instances of constructions (i.e., form-function pairings) and category change will be assumed to be closely connected to the process of constructionalization, i.e., the creation of new form-meaning pairings. Furthermore, it will be shown that the constructionist approach offers the advantage of accounting for the vari...
none2The chapter illustrates the evolution of the lexicalist theory and of the notion of the lexico...
Construction Grammar approaches assume the existence of a constructicon, i.e. a network of grammatic...
This paper deals with one of the properties of the word formation rules of lexicalist morphology. Th...
This paper revisits the notions of lexical category and category change from a constructionist persp...
Category change, broadly defined as the shift from one word class to another, is an important mechan...
Category change, broadly defined as the shift from one word class to another, is often studied as pa...
Category change, i.e. the shift from one word class to another or from free categories to bound cate...
Building on recent findings made in the framework of Construction Grammar, on the one hand, and with...
Martin Hilpert combines construction grammar and advanced corpus-based methodology into a new way of...
Linguistic change is considered as the collective entrenchment of an innovative language trait which...
A pioneering collection of new research that explores categories, constructions, and change in the s...
The so-called second cognitive revolution has substantially changed the way we think about categorie...
We investigate the linguistic phenomenon of transcategorization, that is, the categorial shift of a ...
Construction Grammar as a framework offers a new perspective on traditional historical questions in ...
This paper explores some of the implications of a radically usage-based diachronic construction gram...
none2The chapter illustrates the evolution of the lexicalist theory and of the notion of the lexico...
Construction Grammar approaches assume the existence of a constructicon, i.e. a network of grammatic...
This paper deals with one of the properties of the word formation rules of lexicalist morphology. Th...
This paper revisits the notions of lexical category and category change from a constructionist persp...
Category change, broadly defined as the shift from one word class to another, is an important mechan...
Category change, broadly defined as the shift from one word class to another, is often studied as pa...
Category change, i.e. the shift from one word class to another or from free categories to bound cate...
Building on recent findings made in the framework of Construction Grammar, on the one hand, and with...
Martin Hilpert combines construction grammar and advanced corpus-based methodology into a new way of...
Linguistic change is considered as the collective entrenchment of an innovative language trait which...
A pioneering collection of new research that explores categories, constructions, and change in the s...
The so-called second cognitive revolution has substantially changed the way we think about categorie...
We investigate the linguistic phenomenon of transcategorization, that is, the categorial shift of a ...
Construction Grammar as a framework offers a new perspective on traditional historical questions in ...
This paper explores some of the implications of a radically usage-based diachronic construction gram...
none2The chapter illustrates the evolution of the lexicalist theory and of the notion of the lexico...
Construction Grammar approaches assume the existence of a constructicon, i.e. a network of grammatic...
This paper deals with one of the properties of the word formation rules of lexicalist morphology. Th...