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What is Collocation

Encyclopedia of Distance Learning, Second Edition
The occurrence of two or more words within a short space of each other in a text (Sinclair, 1991); they usually form a unit semantically.
Published in Chapter:
Computer-Assisted Language Learning in East Asia
Hsien-Chin Liou (National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan)
Copyright: © 2009 |Pages: 12
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-198-8.ch057
Abstract
Recently, there has been an obvious blooming of the manufacturing of computer hardware and peripherals in Asian countries: to illustrate, Korea, Japan, China, Singapore, and Taiwan. Meanwhile, various information and communications technologies (ICT) and computer games are blossoming among adolescents’ entertainment choices that promote their media literacies. Educators have long acknowledged the potential of using ICT to enhance instruction (hereafter referred to as CBL, computer-based learning), and organized conferences and associations to promote academic activities and disseminate updated information about them. In spite of the similar excitement in the East Asian area, at present, there is almost no authoritative scholarly CBL journal available in East Asia. Descriptions of regional academic-conference activities would help the international community understand the development and academic achievements in East Asian areas. The paper is organized with a detailed description about professional associations and conferences of CBL in East Asia with a focus on language learning, followed by the report of a unique project in Taiwan as an example of East Asian cases.
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Web-Based English Writing Courses for Graduate Students
The natural co-occurrence of a string of words whose meaning is inferable from literal concepts
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Sharing Corpus Resources in Language Learning
The tendency of certain words to occur more frequently in the vicinity of particular words in texts. For example, ‘rancid’ tends to occur with ‘butter.’
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Attempting to Model Sense Division for Word Sense Disambiguation
Within the area of corpus linguistics, collocation is defined as a sequence of words or terms which co-occur more often than would be expected by chance within the context of a specific word (node/KWIC). Collocation refers to the restrictions on how words can be used together, for example which prepositions are used with particular verbs, or which verbs and nouns are used together. Collocations are examples of lexical units. Collocations should not be confused with idioms. For example, let us consider the same sentence above: ?Buying her first computer, Heron taught herself to trade online. ?A statistical analysis reveals that among the co-occurrences only one of them occurs within the context of computer more often than would be expected by chance, namely online. So we conclude that online is a collocation of computer.
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Text Mining
Collocation is defined as a sequence of words or terms that co-occur more often than would be expected by chance. Collocation is the way in which words are used together regularly.
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Integrating Concordance Tools Into L2 Vocabulary Instruction
Two or more words’ tendency to appear next to or near each other (e.g., to save time, to take a risk).
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