Multiword units and synonymy: interface between collocations, colligations, and semantic prosody
Appropriate use of near-synonyms in English often poses difficulty for learners. This study aims to compare and contrast the near-synonyms predict and foresee, focusing on genres, collocations, colligations, and semantic prosody which specifically characterize each synonymous verb. The study c...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
2021
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Online Access: | http://journalarticle.ukm.my/17254/1/45200-156852-1-PB.pdf http://journalarticle.ukm.my/17254/ https://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1397 |
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Institution: | Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia |
Language: | English |
Summary: | Appropriate use of near-synonyms in English often poses difficulty for learners. This study
aims to compare and contrast the near-synonyms predict and foresee, focusing on genres,
collocations, colligations, and semantic prosody which specifically characterize each
synonymous verb. The study consulted the Corpus of Contemporary American English
(COCA), i.e. the largest corpus representing American English (Davies, 2020), for the
distribution of the target synonyms across genres and the top-20 noun collocates the MI-score
of which is 3 or above. The total frequency of predict in the corpus is far higher than that of
foresee. Of all the eight genres of COCA, predict is the most common in academic texts,
whereas the highest number of occurrences of foresee is found in webpages. Interestingly, both
target synonyms are not characteristic of colloquial English as their frequencies in speaking,
fiction, and TV and movie subtitles are relatively low. The data from COCA also reveal that
both synonymous verbs are common in written English, with predict being far higher in
frequency. Although sharing certain object noun collocates, it is indicated through semantic
prosody, i.e. occurrences of adjacent collocates and surrounding lexical items, that foresee is
associated with negative connotations, while predict does not primarily express adversity. As
near-synonyms of each other, the target words share colligational patterns. However, two
corpus-informed syntactic structures, i.e. foresee + somebody + V.ing and predict + somebody
+ to-infinitive, clearly distinguish between both verb synonyms. It is concluded from the corpus
data that predict and foresee are near-synonyms rather than absolute synonyms since they
clearly differ in connotations and collocational/colligational patterns. |
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