Word of the day: Emancipation
Science serves as a platform towards emancipation of human from dogmatic views that shackled their minds for so long.
Word of the day: Emancipation
Science serves as a platform towards emancipation of human from dogmatic views that shackled their minds for so long.
Definitions of Collocation on the Web:
Phrases composed of words that co-occur for lexical rather than semantic reasons, for example, a heavy smoker is one who smokes a great deal, but someone who writes a great deal is not a heavy writer. This seems to be a lexical fact, not related to the meanings of smoker or writer.
www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/clmt/MTbook/HTML/node98.html
The frequency or tendency some words have to combine with each other. For instance, Algeo notes that the phrases “tall person” and “high mountain” seem to fit together readily without sounding strange. A non-native speaker might talk about a “high person” or “tall mountain,” and this construction might sound slightly odd to a native English speaker. The difference is in collocation.
web.cn.edu/kwheeler/lit_terms_C.html
The likelihood that a particular word will occur in the neighborhood of another word. This tendency can be exploited by commercial names. The words ’spick’ and ’span’ are an example of collocation. We also associate ‘baa’ with ’sheep’ and ‘moo’ with ‘cow’.
www.catch-word.com/glossary.html
The tendency for words to occur regularly with others: sit/chair, house/garage.
www.finchpark.com/courses/glossary.htm
A grouping of words in a sentence
juxtaposition: the act of positioning close together (or side by side); “it is the result of the juxtaposition of contrasting colors”
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
Within the area of corpus linguistics, collocation is defined as a pair of words (the ‘node’ and the ‘collocate’) which co-occur more often than would be expected by chance.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collocation