Phraseology and the Advanced Language Learner
Phraseology is often thought of as an anomaly and a headache for language learners. However, researchers have tended to focus on just one end of the scale: fairly fixed, conventional multi-word units. Here their special status and any divergence from the standard form are clearly evident. What happens at the other end of the scale? How much and what kind of variability does phraseological patterning tolerate? Svetlana Vetchinnikova explores meaning-shift units (MSUs) in second language usage, acquisition and processing. Importantly, she argues for the value of looking at individual languages and tracing MSUs as they are learned from exposure, used in individual language output and processed in the mind - and advocates a shift of focus from groups to individuals. This important study develops a unified view on phraseological patterning in second language acquisition and use and the processes which lead to it.
- Offers a novel perspective on phraseological patterning in second language processing and use
- Provides a synthesis of research on second language processing and use of multi-word units
- Takes an interdisciplinary approach, engaging with a number of fields in linguistics
Product details
March 2024Paperback
9781108731621
284 pages
229 × 152 × 15 mm
0.417kg
6 b/w illus. 38 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. From a unit of meaning to a meaning-shift unit
- 3. L2 use and processing of multi-word units
- 4. Triangulating usage, exposure and processing
- 5. Meaning-shift units in L2 learning and use: Usage vs. exposure
- 6. Meaning-shift units in L2 processing: Usage vs. word association responses
- 7. Toward the bigger picture.