Korean Morphological Collocations: Theoretical and Descriptive Implications
Autor: | Mi Hyun Kim, Alain Polguère |
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Přispěvatelé: | Analyse et Traitement Informatique de la Langue Française (ATILF), Université de Lorraine (UL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Ruslan Mitkov |
Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
History
Korean collocation syntagmatique vs morphologique coréen 030507 speech-language pathology & audiology 03 medical and health sciences Noun Phenomenon Explanatory Combinatorial Lexicology lexicography lexicographie [SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics Practical implications 060201 languages & linguistics Collocation body element noun 06 humanities and the arts Term (logic) Sect Linguistics phrasal vs morphological collocation Highbrow Phraseology 0602 languages and literature 0305 other medical science nom d'élément du corps Lexicologie Explicative et Combinatoire |
Zdroj: | Computational and Corpus-Based Phraseology ISBN: 9783319698045 Europhras Computational and Corpus-Based Phraseology (Second International Conference, Europhras 2017 London, UK, November 13–14, 2017 Proceedings) Ruslan Mitkov. Computational and Corpus-Based Phraseology (Second International Conference, Europhras 2017 London, UK, November 13–14, 2017 Proceedings), 10596, Springer, pp.398-411, 2017, Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) |
DOI: | 10.1007/978-3-319-69805-2_28 |
Popis: | International audience; Phrasemes are often characterized as constrained multiword expressions, like "spill the beans" (idiom) or "black coffee" (collocation), and the very term "phraseology" seems to imply that this phenomenon is restricted to phrases only. Consequently, morphological compounds, like "highbrow" or "bookstore", are usually excluded from the scope of phraseological studies. Phrasemes, however, are not necessarily phrases (syntactically connected wordforms). In Korean, in particular, many compounds have to be analyzed and modeled as phrasemes. Like their phrasal counterparts, Korean compound phrasemes can be either semantically compositional or non-compositional. This paper deals with the first class of such compounds, which we term "morphological collocations." It begins with a presentation of basic phraseological notions (section 1). Then, Korean morphological collocations are introduced (section 2), followed by descriptive repercussions exemplified with the lexicographic modeling of the phraseology of Korean nouns denoting body elements (section 3). The conclusion summarizes theoretical and practical implications of this study (section 4). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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