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constructionsuch

Constructionsuch is a term used in linguistics to describe a search method for linguistic constructions within large text corpora. In construction grammar, a construction is a form-meaning pairing that may be opaque or transparent. Constructionsuch aims to identify instances of these constructions by combining syntactic analysis, pattern-based matching, and statistical evaluation. The approach treats constructions as reusable patterns that can be detected across genres and registers, rather than only as single words.

Methodology: researchers define a set of constructions of interest (for example, ditransitive frameworks, idioms, or light-verb

Applications include linguistic research into construction grammar, development of lexicographic resources, language teaching materials, and enhancements

constructions).
They
then
generate
search
templates
with
grammatical
slots,
lexical
placeholders,
and
semantic
constraints,
and
run
these
templates
over
a
corpus
using
parsing
results
and
surface
forms.
Candidate
instances
are
ranked
by
plausibility,
contextual
fit,
and
frequency,
and
are
then
manually
or
semi-automatically
annotated
with
meaning
and
usage
notes.
Outputs
typically
include
concordance
lines,
frequency
counts,
and
networked
representations
of
construction
usage.
to
natural
language
processing
systems
for
idiom
detection
and
multiword
expressions.
Challenges
include
ambiguity
and
polysemy,
cross-linguistic
variation
in
construction
inventories,
data
sparsity
for
rare
constructions,
and
the
computational
cost
of
large-scale
parsing.
The
concept
remains
evolving,
with
ongoing
work
on
standardizing
construction
inventories
and
improving
automatic
annotation.