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In
corpus linguistics Corpus linguistics is the study of a language as that language is expressed in its text corpus (plural ''corpora''), its body of "real world" text. Corpus linguistics proposes that a reliable analysis of a language is more feasible with corpora ...
, a collocation is a series of words or terms that co-occur more often than would be expected by chance. In phraseology, a collocation is a type of
compositional In semantics, mathematical logic and related disciplines, the principle of compositionality is the principle that the meaning of a complex expression is determined by the meanings of its constituent expressions and the rules used to combine them. ...
phraseme, meaning that it can be understood from the words that make it up. This contrasts with an
idiom An idiom is a phrase or expression that typically presents a figurative, non-literal meaning attached to the phrase; but some phrases become figurative idioms while retaining the literal meaning of the phrase. Categorized as formulaic language ...
, where the meaning of the whole cannot be inferred from its parts, and may be completely unrelated. An example of a phraseological collocation is the expression ''strong tea''. While the same meaning could be conveyed by the roughly equivalent ''powerful tea'', this adjective does not modify ''tea'' frequently enough for English speakers to become accustomed to its co-occurrence and regard it as idiomatic or unmarked. (By way of counterexample, ''powerful'' is idiomatically preferred to ''strong'' when modifying a ''computer'' or a ''car''.) There are about six main types of collocations: adjective + noun, noun + noun (such as
collective nouns In linguistics, a collective noun is a word referring to a collection of things taken as a whole. Most collective nouns in everyday speech are not specific to one kind of thing. For example, the collective noun "group" can be applied to people (" ...
), verb + noun, adverb + adjective, verbs + prepositional phrase (
phrasal verb In the traditional grammar of Modern English, a phrasal verb typically constitutes a single semantic unit composed of a verb followed by a particle (examples: ''turn down'', ''run into'' or ''sit up''), sometimes combined with a preposition (e ...
s), and verb + adverb.
Collocation extraction Collocation extraction is the task of using a computer to extract collocations automatically from a corpus. The traditional method of performing collocation extraction is to find a formula based on the statistical quantities of those words to calc ...
is a computational technique that finds collocations in a document or corpus, using various computational linguistics elements resembling data mining.


Expanded definition

Collocations are partly or fully fixed expressions that become established through repeated context-dependent use. Such terms as ''crystal clear'', ''middle management'', ''nuclear family'', and ''cosmetic surgery'' are examples of collocated pairs of words. Collocations can be in a syntactic relation (such as verb–object: ''make'' and ''decision''), lexical relation (such as
antonymy In lexical semantics, opposites are words lying in an inherently incompatible binary relationship. For example, something that is ''long'' entails that it is not ''short''. It is referred to as a 'binary' relationship because there are two members ...
), or they can be in no linguistically defined relation. Knowledge of collocations is vital for the competent use of a language: a grammatically correct sentence will stand out as awkward if collocational preferences are violated. This makes collocation an interesting area for language teaching. Corpus linguists specify a key word in context ( KWIC) and identify the words immediately surrounding them. This gives an idea of the way words are used. The processing of collocations involves a number of parameters, the most important of which is the ''measure of association'', which evaluates whether the co-occurrence is purely by chance or statistically significant. Due to the non-random nature of language, most collocations are classed as significant, and the association scores are simply used to rank the results. Commonly used measures of association include
mutual information In probability theory and information theory, the mutual information (MI) of two random variables is a measure of the mutual dependence between the two variables. More specifically, it quantifies the " amount of information" (in units such ...
, t scores, and log-likelihood. Rather than select a single definition, Gledhill proposes that collocation involves at least three different perspectives: co-occurrence, a statistical view, which sees collocation as the recurrent appearance in a text of a node and its collocates; construction, which sees collocation either as a correlation between a lexeme and a lexical-grammatical pattern, or as a relation between a base and its collocative partners; and expression, a pragmatic view of collocation as a conventional unit of expression, regardless of form. These different perspectives contrast with the usual way of presenting collocation in phraseological studies. Traditionally speaking, collocation is explained in terms of all three perspectives at once, in a continuum: :Free combination ↔ bound collocation ↔ frozen idiom


In dictionaries

In 1933, Harold Palmer's ''Second Interim Report on English Collocations'' highlighted the importance of collocation as a key to producing natural-sounding language, for anyone learning a foreign language. Thus from the 1940s onwards, information about recurrent word combinations became a standard feature of monolingual learner's dictionaries. As these dictionaries became "less word-centred and more phrase-centred", more attention was paid to collocation. This trend was supported, from the beginning of the 21st century, by the availability of large text corpora and intelligent corpus-querying software, making it possible to provide a more systematic account of collocation in dictionaries. Using these tools, dictionaries such as the '' Macmillan English Dictionary'' and the '' Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English'' included boxes or panels with lists of frequent collocations. There are also a number of specialized dictionaries devoted to describing the frequent collocations in a language. These include (for Spanish) ''Redes: Diccionario combinatorio del español contemporaneo'' (2004), (for French) ''Le Robert: Dictionnaire des combinaisons de mots'' (2007), and (for English) the ''LTP Dictionary of Selected Collocations'' (1997) and the ''Macmillan Collocations Dictionary'' (2010).


Statistically significant collocation

Student's t-test A ''t''-test is any statistical hypothesis test in which the test statistic follows a Student's ''t''-distribution under the null hypothesis. It is most commonly applied when the test statistic would follow a normal distribution if the value of ...
can be used to determine whether the occurrence of a collocation in a corpus is statistically significant. For a bigram w_1w_2, let P(w_1) = \frac be the unconditional probability of occurrence of w_1 in a corpus with size N, and let P(w_2) = \frac be the unconditional probability of occurrence of w_2 in the corpus. The t-score for the bigram w_1w_2 is calculated as: : t = \frac, where \bar = \frac is the sample mean of the occurrence of w_1w_2, \#w_1w_2 is the number of occurrences of w_1w_2, \mu = P(w_i)P(w_j) is the probability of w_1w_2 under the null-hypothesis that w_1 and w_2 appear independently in the text, and s^2 = \bar(1-\bar) \approx \bar is the sample variance. With a large N, the t-test is equivalent to a z-test.


See also

* English collocations * Agreement (linguistics) * Cliché *
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 '' ...
*
Collostructional analysis Collostructional analysis is a family of methods developed by (in alphabetical order) Stefan Th. Gries (University of California, Santa Barbara) and Anatol Stefanowitsch (Free University of Berlin). Collostructional analysis aims at measuring the d ...
*
Compound noun, adjective and verb In linguistics, a compound is a lexeme (less precisely, a word or sign) that consists of more than one stem. Compounding, composition or nominal composition is the process of word formation that creates compound lexemes. Compounding occurs when ...
* Government (linguistics) * Irreversible binomial * Isocolon *
Lexical item In lexicography, a lexical item is a single word, a part of a word, or a chain of words (catena) that forms the basic elements of a language's lexicon (≈ vocabulary). Examples are ''cat'', ''traffic light'', ''take care of'', ''by the way' ...
* N-gram *
Phrasal verb In the traditional grammar of Modern English, a phrasal verb typically constitutes a single semantic unit composed of a verb followed by a particle (examples: ''turn down'', ''run into'' or ''sit up''), sometimes combined with a preposition (e ...
* Phraseology * Phraseme * Sketch Engine * Statistically improbable phrase *
Word sketch A word sketch is a one-page, automatic, corpus-derived summary of a word’s grammatical and collocational behaviour. Word sketches were first introduced by the British corpus linguist Adam KilgarriffKilgarriff, Adam; Rychlý, Pavel; Smrž, Pavel; ...


References


External links

{{Wiktionary, collocation
Ozdic Collocation Dictionary

A Small System Storing Spanish Collocations
(Igor A. Bolshakov & Sabino Miranda-Jiménez)
Morphological characterization of collocations and semantic relationships in Spanish
(Sabino Miranda-Jiménez & Igor A. Bolshakov)
Example of collocations for the word "Surgery"
Lexical units Language education Corpus linguistics Semantic relations