This squib considers some of the issues surrounding the growth and contractions of contentful schemas in the history of English, and the appearance of new word types. An outcome of recent research into language change from the perspective of construction grammar has been the clearer articulation of the relationship between expansion and contraction in both the ‘lexical\u27 and ‘grammatical\u27 domains. Assuming that (i) linguistic knowledge is knowledge of a network of conventionalized and entrenched symbolic pairings of form and meaning (Goldberg 2013), (ii) there is no essential difference between morphological constructions and syntactic constructions (Croft 2001; Booij 2010), and (iii) like syntactic strings, morphological expressions c...
Scholars have stated the particularities of the language used in specialized discourse but little at...
Building on recent findings made in the framework of Construction Grammar, on the one hand, and with...
This chapter argues that there is no absolute boundary between analogy and abstract schemas in word ...
This squib considers some of the issues surrounding the growth and contractions of contentful schema...
This paper discusses how collostructional analysis can be applied to the study of word-formation pa...
Schneider’s Dynamic Model (2003; 2007) traces the different stages in the evolution of New Englishes...
Unified schemas which allow for deriving multiply complex word-formation products are a central conc...
The chapter provides an outline of Construction Morphology (Booij 2010), a recent model of morpholog...
Second language varieties of English (e.g. Indian English, Nigerian English) undergo nativization, i...
This article motivates a usage–based account of morphological knowledge, and its place in the archit...
Morphology is the study of the systematic relationship between the form and meaning of complex words...
This chapter deals with patterns of word-formation, their classification and parameters of cross-lin...
Martin Hilpert combines construction grammar and advanced corpus-based methodology into a new way of...
Category change, broadly defined as the shift from one word class to another, is an important mechan...
This paper critically explores the question of what it means for a construction to be grammatical. T...
Scholars have stated the particularities of the language used in specialized discourse but little at...
Building on recent findings made in the framework of Construction Grammar, on the one hand, and with...
This chapter argues that there is no absolute boundary between analogy and abstract schemas in word ...
This squib considers some of the issues surrounding the growth and contractions of contentful schema...
This paper discusses how collostructional analysis can be applied to the study of word-formation pa...
Schneider’s Dynamic Model (2003; 2007) traces the different stages in the evolution of New Englishes...
Unified schemas which allow for deriving multiply complex word-formation products are a central conc...
The chapter provides an outline of Construction Morphology (Booij 2010), a recent model of morpholog...
Second language varieties of English (e.g. Indian English, Nigerian English) undergo nativization, i...
This article motivates a usage–based account of morphological knowledge, and its place in the archit...
Morphology is the study of the systematic relationship between the form and meaning of complex words...
This chapter deals with patterns of word-formation, their classification and parameters of cross-lin...
Martin Hilpert combines construction grammar and advanced corpus-based methodology into a new way of...
Category change, broadly defined as the shift from one word class to another, is an important mechan...
This paper critically explores the question of what it means for a construction to be grammatical. T...
Scholars have stated the particularities of the language used in specialized discourse but little at...
Building on recent findings made in the framework of Construction Grammar, on the one hand, and with...
This chapter argues that there is no absolute boundary between analogy and abstract schemas in word ...