English Fixed Expression
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
An English Fixed Expression is a fixed expression that exhibits english syntactic rigidity and english lexical invariability in english usage.
- AKA: English Frozen Expression, English Set Phrase, English Fixed Phrase.
- Context:
- It can typically resist English Syntactic Transformations like passivization or topicalization.
- It can often maintain English Word Order without english permutation possibility.
- It can frequently reject English Lexical Substitution of english component words.
- It can usually function as English Single Lexical Unit despite english multiword structure.
- It can commonly appear in English Dictionary as english established entry.
- It can sometimes preserve English Archaic Forms no longer productive in english modern usage.
- It can range from being an English Fully Fixed Expression to being an English Semi-Fixed Expression, depending on its english variation tolerance.
- It can range from being an English Grammatically Regular Fixed Expression to being an English Grammatically Irregular Fixed Expression, depending on its english syntactic conformity.
- It can range from being an English Semantically Transparent Fixed Expression to being an English Semantically Opaque Fixed Expression, depending on its english meaning predictability.
- It can range from being an English High-Frequency Fixed Expression to being an English Low-Frequency Fixed Expression, depending on its english usage rate.
- ...
- Example(s):
- English Binomial Fixed Expressions, such as:
- "by and large" (not *"large and by").
- "spick and span" (not *"span and spick").
- "kith and kin" with english frozen order.
- English Idiomatic Fixed Expressions, such as:
- KICKTHEBUCKET (not *"kick a bucket").
- "red herring" (not *"crimson herring").
- English Formulaic Fixed Expressions, such as:
- "How do you do?" as english greeting formula.
- "So far so good" as english status report.
- ...
- English Binomial Fixed Expressions, such as:
- Counter-Example(s):
- English Free Combination, which allows english full flexibility.
- English Collocation, which permits english limited variation.
- English Productive Pattern, which generates english new instances.
- French Fixed Expression, which follows french fixedness patterns.
- See: Fixed Expression, English Language Expression, English Multiword Expression, English Idiomatic Expression, English Lexical Fixedness Hierarchy, English Collocation, KICKTHEBUCKET, English Frozen Form, Phraseology, English Metaphorical Expression.