Abstract
Abstract
The constructionist framework is more relevant than ever, due to efforts by a broad range of researchers across
the globe, a steady increase in the use of corpus and experimental methods among linguists, consistent findings from laboratory
phonology, neuroscience, sociolinguistics, and striking progress in transformer-based large language models. These advances
promise exciting developments and a great deal more clarity over the next decade. The constructionist approach rests on two
interrelated but distinguishable tenets: a recognition that constructions pair form with function at varying levels of specificity
and abstraction, and the recognition that our knowledge and use of language are dynamic and based on language use.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company