Abstract
Abstract
In every-day language use, two or more structurally unrelated constructions may occasionally give rise to strings
that look very similar on the surface. As a result of this superficial resemblance, a subset of instances of one of these
constructions may deviate in the probabilistic preference for either of several possible formal variants. This effect is called
‘constructional contamination’, and was introduced in Pijpops & Van de Velde
(2016). Constructional contamination bears testimony to the hypothesis that language users do not always execute a full
parse of the utterances they interpret, but instead often rely on ‘shallow parsing’ and the storage of large, unanalyzed chunks of
language in memory, as proposed in Ferreira, Bailey, & Ferraro (2002), Ferreira & Patson (2007), and Dąbrowska
(2014).
Pijpops & Van de Velde (2016) investigated a single case study in
depth, namely the Dutch partitive genitive. This case study is reviewed, and three new case studies are added, namely the
competition between long and bare infinitives, word order variation in verbal clusters, and preterite formation. We find evidence
of constructional contamination in all case studies, albeit in varying degrees. This indicates that constructional contamination
is not a particularity of the Dutch partitive genitive but appears to be more wide-spread, affecting both morphology and syntax.
Furthermore, we distinguish between two forms of constructional contamination, viz. first degree and second degree contamination,
with first degree contamination producing greater effects than second degree contamination.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
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