grammatical collocations
Linguística
Verbete 1 de 1
substantivo
Contexto: "For instance, Moon (1998: 79) excludes “for practical reasons” compound nouns, adjectives, and verbs such as civil servant, self-raising, and freeze-dry, but includes units such as at last and in fact, which she calls ‘grammatical collocations’. The reason she invokes to exclude compounds is that “(t)he interest in compound words seems to me to rest largely in morphology” (ibid.: 3)."
Fonte: Granger, Sylviane ; Paquot, Magali. Disentangling the phraseological web. In: Granger S.; Meunier F., Phraseology: An Interdisciplinary Perspective, Benjamins : Amsterdam and Philadelphia 2008, p.27-49
Fonte: Granger, Sylviane ; Paquot, Magali. Disentangling the phraseological web. In: Granger S.; Meunier F., Phraseology: An Interdisciplinary Perspective, Benjamins : Amsterdam and Philadelphia 2008, p.27-49
Termo equivalente: colocações gramaticais
Definição: "Grammatical collocations are restricted combinations of a lexical and a grammatical word, typically verb/noun/adjective + preposition, e.g. depend on, cope with, a contribution to, afraid of, angry at, interested in."
Fonte: Granger, Sylviane ; Paquot, Magali. Disentangling the phraseological web. In: Granger S.; Meunier F., Phraseology: An Interdisciplinary Perspective, Benjamins : Amsterdam and Philadelphia 2008, p.27-49
Fonte: Granger, Sylviane ; Paquot, Magali. Disentangling the phraseological web. In: Granger S.; Meunier F., Phraseology: An Interdisciplinary Perspective, Benjamins : Amsterdam and Philadelphia 2008, p.27-49
Definição em português: "As colocações gramaticais são combinações restritas de uma palavra lexical e uma gramatical, tipicamente verbo / substantivo / adjetivo + preposição, por ex. depender, lidar com, uma contribuição para, medo de, zangado com, interessado em."