English Collocation
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
An English Collocation is a collocation that represents english word combinations with english statistical co-occurrence and english restricted substitutability.
- AKA: English Word Partnership, English Collocational Expression, English Restricted Combination.
- Context:
- It can typically demonstrate English Mutual Expectancy between english collocates.
- It can often maintain English Semantic Compositionality with english selectional preference.
- It can frequently exhibit English Statistical Significance in english corpus data.
- It can usually allow English Syntactic Flexibility unlike english fixed expressions.
- It can commonly reflect English Usage Convention rather than english grammatical rule.
- It can sometimes vary across English Regional Varietys and english registers.
- It can range from being an English Strong Collocation to being an English Weak Collocation, depending on its english association strength.
- It can range from being an English Grammatical Collocation to being an English Lexical Collocation, depending on its english component type.
- It can range from being an English Transparent Collocation to being an English Opaque Collocation, depending on its english semantic clarity.
- It can range from being an English Frequent Collocation to being an English Rare Collocation, depending on its english occurrence rate.
- ...
- Example(s):
- English Adjective-Noun Collocations, such as:
- "strong coffee" (not *"powerful coffee").
- "heavy rain" (not *"weighty rain").
- "bitter disappointment" with english intensification.
- English Verb-Noun Collocations, such as:
- "make a decision" (not *"do a decision").
- "take a photo" (not *"make a photo").
- "pay attention" with english light verb.
- English Adverb-Adjective Collocations, such as:
- "fully aware" (not *"completely aware").
- "deeply concerned" with english degree modification.
- ...
- English Adjective-Noun Collocations, such as:
- Counter-Example(s):
- English Free Combination, which lacks english co-occurrence restriction.
- English Fixed Expression, which prohibits english variation.
- English Idiomatic Expression, which lacks english compositionality.
- French Collocation, which follows french co-occurrence patterns.
- See: Collocation, English Language Expression, English Multiword Expression, Institutionalised Phrase, English Fixed Expression, English Idiomatic Expression, Corpus Linguistics, Statistical Association, English Lexical Cohesion, English Metaphorical Expression.