Collocational restriction

Collocational restriction

Collocational restriction is a linguistic term used in morphology. The term refers to the fact that in certain two-word phrases the meaning of an individual word is restricted to that particular phrase (cf. idiom). For instance: the adjective dry can only mean 'not sweet' in combination with the noun wine.

A more illustrative example is the one given below:

  • white wine
  • white coffee
  • white noise
  • white man

All four instances of white can be said to be idiomatic because in combination with certain nouns the meaning of white changes. In none of the examples does white have its usual meaning. Instead, in the examples above it means 'yellowish', 'brownish', 'containing many frequencies with about equal amplitude', and 'pinkish' or 'pale brown', respectively.

Bibliography

  • Carstairs-McCarthy, A. (2002), An Introduction to English Morphology, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh.
  • Crystal, D. (2003), A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics, Blackwell, Oxford.

See also


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Collocation — This article is about the corpus linguistics notion. For other uses, see Colocation (disambiguation). In corpus linguistics, collocation defines a sequence of words or terms that co occur more often than would be expected by chance. In… …   Wikipedia

  • Collocation extraction — is the task of extracting collocations automatically from a corpus using a computer. Within the area of corpus linguistics, collocation is defined as a sequence of words or terms which co occur more often than would be expected by chance. Crystal …   Wikipedia

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