Chapter 1 the study of collocations
Table 4. Types of Collocation used in the study*
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colloca
Table 4. Types of Collocation used in the study*
TYPE EXAMPLE 1. Noun Preposition argument about 2. Noun to Infinitive (it was a) pleasure to do it 3. Noun that-clause he took an oath that he would do .... 4. Preposition Noun in agony 5. Adjective Preposition angry at 6. Predicate Adjective to Infinitive she is ready to go 7. Adjective that-clause she was afraid that she would fail... 8. SVO to O/ SVOO he sent the book to his brother 9. SVO to O they described the book to her 10. SVO for O/ SVOO she bought a shirt for her husband 11. SV(O) Preposition O we export to many countries 12. SV to Infinitive they began to speak 13. SV Infinitive we must work 164 14. SV V-ing he kept talking 15. SVO to Infinitive she asked me to come 16. SVO Infinitive she heard them leave 17. SVO V-ing I caught them stealing apples 18. SV Possessive V-ing they love his clowning 19. SV(O) that-clause they admitted that they were wrong 20. SVO to be c we consider her to be well trained 21. SVOc she dyed her hair red 22. SVOO the teacher asked the pupil a question 23. SV(O) Adverbial he carried himself well 24. SV(O) wh-word he asked how to do it 25. S(it) VO to Infinitive it surprised me to learn of her decision 26. SVc he was a teacher 27. Verb Noun/Pronoun (creation) make an impression 28. Verb Noun (eradication) reject an appeal 29. Adjective Noun strong tea 30. Noun Verb bees buzz 31. Noun1 of Noun2 a piece of advice 32. Adverb Adjective deeply absorbed 33. Verb Adverb affect deeply 34. Noun Noun aptitude test 35. Miscellaneous in fact 36. Preposition Determiner Noun on the contrary 165 37. Phrasal Verb to pass on Note: S: Subject, V: Verb, O: Object, c: complement * Henceforth, ‘Preposition’ and ‘Prep’, ‘Adjective’ and ‘Adj’, ‘Noun’ and ‘N’, ‘Verb’ and ‘V’, ‘Infinitive’ and ‘Inf’, ‘creation’ and ‘creat’, ‘determiner’ and ‘det’ are used interchangeably depending on the availability of space in the tables. See also table of abbreviations. The categorisation of the above collocation types in lexical and grammatical collocations by the BBI (see section 1.3.3.) was further refined by Zhang (1993). According to Zhang, a lexical collocation is "a type of collocation where one component recurrently co-occurs with one or more other components as the only lexical choice or one of the few lexical choices in a combination" (Zhang 1993:14). A grammatical collocation, on the other hand, is "a type of collocation where one component recurrently co-occurs with one or more other components as a grammatical category, rather than a particular lexical item" (Zhang 1993:14). In other words, if a collocation is lexicalised, i.e. if the combination of an open class word (verb, noun adjective, adverb) and a preposition or another open class word is used as a single word, e.g. 'to do one's homework', 'to depend on', 'strong in', then it is a lexical collocation. If the collocation is a combination of an open class word (verb, adjective, noun, adverb) and a clause, infinitive, gerund, or preposition, then it is a grammatical collocation, e.g. 'enjoy + V-ing', 'want + to infinitive'. Zhang's definition of lexical and grammatical collocations was found to be more appropriate than the 166 BBI's for pedagogical research, and this study considers the following types to be lexical collocations (Types 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, and 33 were also defined as lexical collocations by the BBI): Download 0.8 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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