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Prototypes in Cognitive Linguistics


Note

1 In order to calculate cue and category validities we need information on the

overall frequency of the features, the categories, and the occurrence of the

features in the categories. For semantic categories, these data are simply not

obtainable. (How could we ever determine the number of times we have

encountered  “flying things” along with data on the number birds, and flying

birds, that we have encountered?) Such data is, however, readily derivable from

language corpora with respect to the occurrence of constructions and their

constituents. Thus, Gries (2003) was able to apply the notion of cue validity in

order to characterize the prototypes of two contrasting constructions in

English, namely the ditransitive [V NP NP] and its prepositional alternative

[V NP to/for NP]. The “features” of the constructions involved such aspects as

the animacy of the NPs, their length, their definiteness, and their status as given

or new.


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