0 a word or phrase that is often used with another word or phrase, in a way that sounds correct to people who have spoken the language all their lives, but might not be expected from the meaning:
As argued mutatis mutandis in note 18 above, the existence of other do + noun collocations is irrelevant.
In the nineteenth century there is some evidence that its use in certain collocations came to be associated with women and children.
In contrast, the relatively low degree of co-activation in stem-particle collocations entails a relatively low degree of cohesion of their constituents.
If we assume that frequent collocations are stored, then we have a way of capturing the intuition that t-to-r is essentially becoming lexicalised.
In the case of the human language processing system, collocations are learnt or compiled by experience, using feedback from language use, performance mistakes, etc.
Collocations like foot the bill and curry favour, whose constituents do not like to be separated, may be termed bound collocations.
Learning by collocations and co-occurrences is the most addressed method in statistical learning of ontological knowledge.
While no instances have been detected for the 20th century, the latest occurrences in the 19th century are preserved in unproductive or nonstandard collocations.
中文繁体
搭配(詞), (詞語的)習慣組合, 搭配詞組…
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搭配(词), (词语的)习惯组合, 搭配词组…
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colocação…
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kolokacja, związek wyrazowy…
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bir sözcük veya ifadenin başka sözcüklerle kullanıldığında tabii görünmesi, tabii gözüken iki ya da daha fazla sözcüklerin uyumu, ahengi…
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слово-партнер, часто употребляемое сочетание слов, коллокация…
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