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- Q1122269 subject Q7136253.
- Q1122269 subject Q7467241.
- Q1122269 subject Q8587892.
- Q1122269 abstract "In corpus linguistics, a collocation is a sequence of words or terms that co-occur more often than would be expected by chance. In phraseology, collocation is a sub-type of phraseme. An example of a phraseological collocation, as propounded by Michael Halliday, is the expression strong tea. While the same meaning could be conveyed by the roughly equivalent *powerful tea, this expression is considered incorrect by English speakers. Conversely, the corresponding expression for computer, powerful computers is preferred over *strong computers. Phraseological collocations should not be confused with idioms, where meaning is derived, whereas collocations are mostly compositional.There are about six main types of collocations: adjective+noun, noun+noun (such as collective nouns), verb+noun, adverb+adjective, verbs+prepositional phrase (phrasal verbs), and verb+adverb.Collocation extraction is a task that extracts collocations automatically from a corpus, using computational linguistics.".
- Q1122269 wikiPageExternalLink syntaclause.com.
- Q1122269 wikiPageExternalLink search?hl=en&w=Surgery.
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- Q1122269 wikiPageWikiLink Q7136253.
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- Q1122269 comment "In corpus linguistics, a collocation is a sequence of words or terms that co-occur more often than would be expected by chance. In phraseology, collocation is a sub-type of phraseme. An example of a phraseological collocation, as propounded by Michael Halliday, is the expression strong tea. While the same meaning could be conveyed by the roughly equivalent *powerful tea, this expression is considered incorrect by English speakers.".
- Q1122269 label "Collocation".