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Collocation

Collocation refers to the habitual co-occurrence of words in language use. It describes how certain words tend to pair with specific partners more often than would be expected by chance. Collocations are a feature of natural speech and writing and can be productive and flexible, not merely fixed phrases. They influence the naturalness of expression and the choices available to speakers and writers.

Common types include lexical collocations such as adjective + noun (strong tea, heavy rain), verb + noun (make

Collocation is a central concept in lexicon and corpus linguistics. While some collocations are highly fixed,

Studying collocations typically involves corpus analysis and statistical measures of co-occurrence, such as frequency, mutual information,

a
decision,
take
a
walk),
and
noun
+
noun
(data
analysis,
traffic
jam).
Other
patterns
include
verb
+
adverb
(speak
fluently)
and
preposition
+
noun
(in
trouble).
Collocations
differ
from
idioms
and
other
fixed
expressions
in
that
the
individual
words
retain
their
ordinary
meanings,
and
the
pairings
can
often
be
varied
within
acceptable
limits
while
preserving
the
implied
sense.
many
allow
slight
modification
without
losing
acceptability,
which
contributes
to
fluency
and
versatility
in
language
use.
Understanding
collocations
helps
learners
produce
more
natural-sounding
text
and
speech,
and
it
informs
teaching,
testing,
and
lexical
resources
such
as
collocation
dictionaries.
or
other
association
metrics.
Researchers
use
concordances
and
word
sketches
to
identify
strong
collocations,
while
learners
encounter
collocations
through
exposure
and
practice
with
authentic
language
data.