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Hits 5.861 – 5.866 of 5.866

5861
Corpus Linguistics and Corpus-Based Research and Its Implication in Applied Linguistics: A Systematic Review
In: PAROLE: Journal of Linguistics and Education; Vol 10, No 2 (2020): Volume 10 Number 2 October 2020; 176-181 ; 23380683 ; 2087-345X (2020)
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5862
Mídias, mudanças e contradições no mundo do trabalho: : a apropriação local da campanha mundial da Coca-Cola ‘Abra a Felicidade’
In: Comunicação & Informação; v. 23 (2020) ; 2317-675X ; 1415-5842 (2020)
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5863
Mídias, mudanças e contradições no mundo do trabalho: : a apropriação local da campanha mundial da Coca-Cola ‘Abra a Felicidade’
In: Comunicação & Informação; v. 23 (2020) ; 2317-675X ; 1415-5842 (2020)
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5864
Coercion for the ages? A thousand years of parallel inchoative histories for the French passé simple and passé composé
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 5, No 2 (2020): PLSA Special Issue – Formal Approaches to Grammaticalization; 51–66 ; 2473-8689 (2020)
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5865
How we got here: Short-scale change in identity labels for trans, cis, and non-binary people in the 2000s
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 5, No 1 (2020): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 499–513 ; 2473-8689 (2020)
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5866
Verbs describing routines facilitate object omission in English
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 5, No 1 (2020): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 44–58 ; 2473-8689 (2020)
Abstract: Which normally-transitive English verbs can omit their objects (I ate), and why? This paper explores three factors that have been suggested to facilitate object omission: (i) how strongly a verb selects its object (Resnik 1993); (ii) a verb's frequency (Goldberg 2005); (iii) the extent to which the verb is associated with a routine – a recognized, conventional series of actions within a community (Levin & Rapaport Hovav 2014; Martí­ 2015). To operationalize (iii), this paper leverages the assumption that a given verb may be more strongly associated with a routine in one community than another. Comparing writings across communities, this paper offers corpus and experimental evidence that verbs omit their objects more readily in the communities where they are more strongly associated with a routine. Object-omitting uses of verbs are analyzed, following other work, as intransitive aspectual activities describing an agent's routine actions; so the hearer's task is not to recover a missing object, but to recognize the routine described by the verb. More broadly, the paper explores how the meaning and syntactic potential of verbs are shaped by the practices of the people who use them.
Keyword: argument structure; computational/corpus linguistics; language variation; lexical semantics; social media; verbs
URL: https://doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v5i1.4663
http://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/PLSA/article/view/4663
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