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Construction Grammar vs. Lexical Grammar: A case study of the modal load in if-conditionals

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Unpublished
  • Costas Gabrielatos
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Publication date2011
Number of pages35
<mark>Original language</mark>English
EventInternational Symposium on the Sociology of Words: Lexical Meaning, Combinatorial Potential and Computational Implementation - Murcia, Spain
Duration: 1/12/20112/12/2011

Conference

ConferenceInternational Symposium on the Sociology of Words: Lexical Meaning, Combinatorial Potential and Computational Implementation
Country/TerritorySpain
CityMurcia
Period1/12/112/12/11

Abstract

Corpus based examinations of the extent of modal marking (modal load) in if-conditionals in the written BNC (Gabrielatos 2007, 2010) have revealed that they have a significantly higher modal load than average, as well as a higher modal load than indirect interrogatives with if and whether, concessive conditionals with even if and whether, as well as non-conditional bi-partite constructions with when and whenever. More importantly, if-conditionals show a higher modal load than conditionals with other subordinators (assuming, in case, on condition, provided, supposing, unless). It is also noteworthy that the protases of if-conditionals have a modal load at least equal to that of the baseline – despite protases being already modally marked by if (not calculated in the modal load). The picture becomes more complicated, and more interesting, when examining the modal load of the subordinate and matrix parts of the constructions in focus – particularly those containing if as their subordinator. The explanations for the emerging modal load patterns are sought in the tenets of two recent linguistic theories: Construction Grammar and Lexical Grammar. More precisely, what is sought is whether the modal load of if-conditionals (and other constructions with if) can be explained by the collocations (and semantic preference) of the word if (Lexical Grammar), or by the nature (and composition) of individual constructions (Construction Grammar).