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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton September 1, 2008

Negative entrenchment: A usage-based approach to negative evidence

  • Anatol Stefanowitsch
From the journal Cognitive Linguistics

Abstract

The alleged absence of negative evidence in the linguistic input has played a major role both in linguistic theorizing and in discussions about linguistic methodology. I argue that, given a sufficiently sophisticated understanding of frequency, negative evidence can be inferred from the positive evidence in the linguistic input. Using an extension of collostructional analysis, I show how the corpus linguist, and, by analogy, the language learner, can discriminate between combinations of linguistic items that are accidentally absent from a given corpus and combinations whose absence is statistically significant. I also show that this kind of negative corpus evidence correlates with degrees of acceptability in judgment tasks. I propose a conceptualization of such negative evidence as negative entrenchment in a usage-based model.


Author e-mail: .

Received: 2008-11-22
Revised: 2008-01-30
Published Online: 2008-09-01
Published in Print: 2008-August

© 2008 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin

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