Jan Odijk
Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Download articlehttps://doi.org/10.3384/ecp2020172012Published in: Selected Papers from the CLARIN Annual Conference 2019
Linköping Electronic Conference Proceedings 172:12, p. 94-107
Published: 2020-07-03
ISBN: 978-91-7929-807-4
ISSN: 1650-3686 (print), 1650-3740 (online)
This paper analyses data to address a specific linguistic problem, i.e. the acquisition of the modification
potential of the three more or less synonymous Dutch degree modifiers heel, erg and
zeer, all meaning ‘very’, which show syntactic differences in modification potential. It continues
the research reported on in (Odijk, 2016). The analysis makes crucial use of linguistic applications
developed in the CLARIN infrastructure, in particular the treebank search applications
PaQu (Parse and Query) and GrETEL Version 4.00. The analysis benefits from the use of parsed
corpora (treebanks) in combination with the search and analysis options offered by PaQu and
GrETEL. Earlier work showed that despite little data for zeer modifying adpositional phrases
adult speakers end up with a generalised modification potential for this word. In this paper, I
extend the dataset considered, and find more (but still little) data for this phenomenon. However,
I also find a similar amount of data that form counterexamples to the non-generalisation of the
modification potential of heel. I argue that the examples with heel concern constructions with
idiosyncratic semantics and therefore are not counted as evidence for the general rule of modification.
I suggest a simple statistical analysis to account for the fact that children ‘learn’ that heel
cannot modify verbs or adpositions though there is no explicit evidence for this and they are not
explicitly taught so.