More recently, grammaticalization theorists have become increasingly aware of the role of collocations in grammatical development. One of these roles is to define phonetic reductions and fusion in frequent collocations as constructionalization. Based on frequency of occurrences, the present study explores the implications of high-frequency collocations in Turkish Sign Language for grammaticalization and offers a novel account of constructional change of deǧil 'not' on usage-based grounds. Specifically, the study suggests that (i) the chunking process is not language-specific within the spoken modality, as noted previously in the literature, (ii) the frequency of collocations is strongly correlated with phonetic reduction and duration, (iii) the fusional characteristics of [sign + deǧil] collocations can be classified under four reduced constructional schemas, (iv) the monosyllabicity of a scheme appears to be criterion for it to be productive in signed modality and (v) the semantic changes of frequent [sign + deǧil] collocations are related to the notion of subjectification in TiD.
CITATION STYLE
Makaroǧlu, B. (2023). The next station: Chunking of deǧil “not” collocations in Turkish Sign Language. Cognitive Linguistics, 34(3–4), 371–409. https://doi.org/10.1515/cog-2022-0050
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