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How typology shapes the constructional network: Denominal verb constructions in English, Dutch and German

by Kristel Van Goethem (Author) Nikos Koutsoukos (Author)
51 Pages
Open Access
Journal: Zeitschrift für Wortbildung / Journal of Word Formation Volume 6 Issue 1 Year 2022 pp. 7 - 57

Summary

This study proposes a cross-linguistic, corpus-based, and constructionist analysis of denominal verbs (DNVs) in English, Dutch and German. DNV constructions include various morphological construction types, such as conversion (e.g. English bottle > to bottle), prefixation (e.g. Dutch arm ‘arm’ > omarmen ‘to embrace’) and suffixation (e.g. German Katapult ‘catapult’ > katapultieren ‘to catapult’). We investigate the correlation between the distribution of DNV constructions and the typological properties of the languages, focusing on boundary permeability, inflectional complexity, syntactic configurationality and word-class assignment. The study shows that, although the three languages have the same repertoire of DNV constructions at their disposal, a Germanic cline can be detected in their preferences for non-overt vs overt marking of the word-class change. As such, the study highlights the impact of typological factors on the shape of language-specific constructional networks.

Biographical notes

Kristel Van Goethem (Author) Nikos Koutsoukos (Author)

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Title: How typology shapes the constructional network: Denominal verb constructions in English, Dutch and German