This paper demonstrates the essential role of corpus data in the development of a theory that explains and predicts word behavior. We make this point through a case study of verbs of sound, drawing our evidence primarily from the British National Corpus. We begin by considering pretheoretic notions of the verbs of sound as presented in corpus-based dictionaries and then contrast them with the predictions made by a theory of syntax, as represented by Chomsky's Government-Binding framework. We identify and classify the transitive uses of sixteen representative verbs of sound found in the corpus data. Finally, we consider what a linguistic account with both syntactic and lexical semantic components has to offer as an explanation of observed differences in the behavior of the sample verbs.
Kim, Songhee, Jeffrey R. Binder, Colin Humphries & Lisa L. Conant
2024. Decomposing unaccusativity: a statistical modelling approach. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience► pp. 1 ff.
Leben, Derek
2015. Neoclassical Concepts. Mind & Language 30:1 ► pp. 44 ff.
Levin, Beth & Bonnie Krejci
2019. Talking about the weather: Two construals of precipitation events in English. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 4:1
LIU, MEICHUN & CHIAYIN HU
2008. Conceptual Schema as Semantic Link: A Frame-based Study of Mandarin Cognition Verbs. International Journal of Computer Processing of Languages 21:01 ► pp. 55 ff.
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