Collocation, Collocation, Collocation: Discourse ... - York University

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Aug 6, 2008 - role of the lexicon in grammatical variation not well understood ... Range is an indication of the relative strength of the factors in the analysis.
13th International Conference on Methods in Dialectology

University of Leeds • August 6, 2008

Collocation, Collocation, Collocation: Discourse Formulas in Grammatical Variation Rena Torres Cacoullos University of New Mexico [email protected]

&

James A. Walker York University [email protected]

I. INTRODUCTION

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Table 1: Factors contributing to the occurrence of singular agreement and there’s in plural existentials in Quebec City English.2

role of the lexicon in grammatical variation not well understood o low number of tokens o assumption of strict modularity between grammar and lexicon ‘lexicon’: conventionalized/routinized language units o lexical items o collocations of lexical and functional elements at the phrasal level types of evidence for lexical/collocational effects: o proportion of data (e.g., Poplack 1992) o differences in overall rate (e.g., Thompson & Mulac 1991) o differences in conditioning by language-internal factors

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Total N: Input:

Tense Past Present

(2) (3) (4)

(5)

b. Singular agreement: But there was a lot of foxes. Present contracted: There’s two high schools. Presence of plural –s: But there was a hundred and some lakes up there. Phrasal extension beyond the NP: a. And there were guys that were there also. b. And there were just a few of us sent back, you see. c. There’s not that many places to hide. Presence of intervening material: Oh, I mean, yeah, there was always names.

there’s

946 .526

1,688 .438

.60 .18

[ ] [ ]

Range:

Plural -s Absent Present

42

.63 .37 Range:

II . PLURAL EXISTENTIALS

(1) a. Plural agreement: There were foxes around there.

SG AGR

Extension Adverbial None Clausal

(9:362) 1

26

.64 .53 .43 Range:

(9:361)

Intervening Material Present Absent

(72:006)

21

Range:

(26:943) (2:137) (54:26) (77:125)

[ ] [ ] [ ]

.64 .48

Type of Determiner “a” Quantifier Adjective Bare Negative Definite Number Other Quantifier

(43:427)

[ ] [ ]

16

[ [ [ [ [ [ [ Range:

.58 .49

] ] ] ] ] ] ]

9

.65 .55 .49 .48 .46 .39 .39 25

[ ] = not selected as significant 1

Examples are identified by speaker number and line number in the Quebec City component of the Quebec English corpus (Poplack, Walker & Malcolmson 2006).

2

Factor weights >.5 favour, factor weights