Collocation in Modern Standard Arabic revisited”
Paula Santillan Grimm’
1. Introduction
Over the last two decades there has been a great deal of interest in lexical
studies, particularly in the combinatorics of words in natural languages.
Conventionalized forms, frames, routine formulae, idioms, and collocations
have proved to be chiefly appealing in the areas of phraseology, lexico-
graphy, stylistics and applied linguistics, In the field of Arabic linguistics,
proverbs, idioms and compounds have taken the lion’s share of researching,
while collocations have been dealt with in a rather intermittent and modest
way. Moreover, scholars have devoted most of their research to applied
ateas of collocational investigation, being lexicography (Anu-Ssavoau 1989,
1991a, 1995, forthcoming; Hooc.ann 1993; Heum. 1994; Hartz 2002, 2004)
and translation (Hue, 1989; Guazats 1993a, 1993b; Suan and Farchat
1992; Asu-Ssavnen 2001; At-Rawr 2001; A1-Brasut 2005; Banumaw 2006) the
two most prolific fields.” What surprises us most is the limited amount of
rescarch on collocations that has been conducted within Arabic lexicology,
let alone phraseology. In addition, “the relatively few modern studies on
collocation attempted by Arab researchers tend to utilize the conceptual
framework developed in English lexical studies” (Banuwai 2006: 137),
which renders less feasible their applicability for investigating collocations
in this Semitic language.
This paper is set to contribute to the development of a more comprehen-
sive Arab notion of collocation. We aim at approaching the collocational
phenomenon in Modern Standard Arabic from a phraseological perspective,
Department of Semitic Studies, University of Granada, Spain.
2 For a recent review of the literature on collocations in Arabic see Bi-Gesit
(2006).
+ ‘This paper has been carried out thanks to a research doctoral scholarship granted
to the author by the Agencia Espaifola de Cooperaci6n Internacional (Spanish
Ministry of Foreign Affairs)Collocation in Modern Standard Arabic revisited 23
bearing in mind two basic goals: first, describing their main syntactic and
semantic features, which will help to come out with a practical definition of
the concept; and, second, putting forward an inclusive taxonomy of colloca-
tions in MSA, whilst bringing to surface the most relevant characteristics
and behaviour of each category.
2, What a collocation is and what it is not
For some linguists, collocations have become a highly controversial phen-
omenon, as the boundaries between them and other multi-word lexical
items do not always happen to be clear-cut, Nowadays, the term ‘colloca-
tion’ is used to name quite heterogeneous linguistic phenomena, ranging
from loosely fixed expressions Cagrd dirdsa) to routines (‘ald kull hal) and
sayings (a hawla wa-lé quwwata °ill@ bi-LIdh). This confusion is, in fact,
pertinent to all fixed expressions; according to Moon (1998: 2), “[dlifferent
terms are sometimes used to describe identical or very similar kinds of unit;
at the same time, a single term may be used to denote very different
phenomena”, However, as Zunuaca (2002: 99) claims, graduality in language
should not represent an insurmountable obstacle to define the categories
and concepts of analysis, In fact, whatever variation may occur within
transitional phases, it is well-defined categories which prevail.
From a phraseological perspective, collocations border on free combina-
tions, on the one hand, and on compounds and idioms, on the other. As
above mentioned, these four types of combinations should be conceived as
elements within a linguistic continuum and, as such, one should accept the
fact that there must be areas in which fuzziness occurs. ‘The literature has
set two main criteria, fixedness and transparency, by which the four
different lexical combinations are arranged along this continuum:
RE ___COLLOCATIONS COMPOUNDS —s IDIOMS
COMBINATIONS
Lael ee
——a ee
‘Table 1. Lexical combinations along the main criteria of the phraseological continu-
‘um: transpareney and fixedness.
In order to work out a practical definition of collocation, we will next
explain the main syntactic and semantic features of this phenomenon,24 P, Santillan Grimm.
whilst comparing it to other neighbouring combinations within the phrase-
ological continuum.
POLILEXICALITY,
‘There are two basic types of collocations: lexical and grammatical
collocations (BzNsow et al, 1986: ix). Lexical collocations are combinations
of, at least, two lexemes (1). Additionally, lexical collocations may also
contain a function word, such as a preposition or an article (2).
(A) ihiadama sind’; agla‘at ira; ’arda qatilan; infagara gadiban/dahikan;
tasarraba xabar; ihtazsa farahan; *awabid al-kaldm; 7itlag al-nar; tagytr
Zadariyy; tuhma bétila; taman fabis; gi said; hiwar saxin/“Gsif; xattata
xutja; Sara'a qaniin; masrah al?ahdat..
(2) inama fi -ahdan; istagraqa fi-l-tafkir; *axlada °ila al-raha; ?ata bi-L-
mustata’; balid althsiis; takallal bi-l-nagdly tagil at-hadm; tiga bi-Lnafs;
hadd al-basr; had min al-nas; x@in al‘ahd; sahab min al-tadawul; Saraka
bilan,
Grammatical collocations, on the other hand, involve a lexeme and a
preposition (allaqa ‘ald, ragaba fi), and will not be considered in the present
paper.
LEXICAL RESTRICTIONS
‘The components of a collocation’ are selected among many other possible
combinations that, on a grammar basis, could also have been chosen to
work as such. In other words, the elements of a collocation attract each
other due not to grammatical rules but to a lexical combinatory preference
imposed by the use of language within a particular community. The
repeated use of combined lexemes over time becomes so frequent that,
eventually, the speakers of that community automatically associate @
Jexeme A with another lexeme B.
ARBITRARINESS:
‘The fact that the elements of a collocation are lexically restricted grants
them a primaty level of fixedness which is totally arbitrary: there is no
semantic rule that may explain why we say °aglabiyya sahiqa instead of
2aglabiyya gata or hubb Jamm instead of hubb hil. As Exery (1991: 61)
asserts, “collocations are language-specific and hence unpredictable, Tt is the
3. From now on the term ‘collocation’ will be used to refer to lexical collocations.Collocation in Modern Standard Arabic revisited 25
interlingual incongruence which can give rise to second-language learning
difficulties and problems of translation equivalence”.
FREQUENT CO-OGCURRENCE
‘An important quantitative charaeteristic of collocations is the frequent co-
‘occurrence of their components. Nonetheless, we should not take for
granted that all frequent lexical combinations are collocations, as the ease
may happen that a highly frequent combination be free (sawt mus‘ig);
conversely, there are some combinations that, despite not being signifi-
cantly frequent from a quantitative approach, they should still be deemed
collocations because of the semantic relationship held between their
elements Cubbahat al-sultéin).
SYNTACTIC SHIFTS
Due to the strong lexical bonds that exist between their elements,
collocations allow their constituents to undergo certain formal modi
tions, yet maintaining their lexical value. In this way, we find collocational
series of lexemes, as in: tarawwada gifan (verb + nouns) ~ mutarawwid
aan {noun (active participle) + nouns] ~ tarawwada min al-ga (verb +
particle + noun). Corpus evidence, however, confirms that not all forms of
‘a lemma’ hold the same collocational patterns (Sivc.ain 2004: xix): we say
rafa'a ma‘nawiyyatahu (verb + nowrino) but ma‘nawiyyatuhu ‘aliya (noun +
adjective); or x@ibat ’amal (noun + noun), but not xa’iba ’amaliyya (noun
+ adjective).
‘Apart from varying on the part of the speech level, collocations may
undergo other types of formal modifications, such as: adjectival modifica-
tion (wada‘a al-lamsat al-axira), pronominalization, (saggala_at-
hadaf > sagalahu), relativization (faraha al-swél alladi kana fi ball, the
extraction of one or more components (al-quwwat al-mua‘addida al-
Hinsiyyat > al-muta‘addida), etc. In this respect, collocations are closer to
free combinations than to idioms.
HYPOTACTIC RELATIONSHIP
Collocations are combinations of two lexemes that hold different semantic
values: on the one hand, there is the base, which has an autonomous
semiotactic status, and, on the other hand, the collocate, whose meaning is
4 Swcuain defines ‘lemma’ as “composite sets of word-forms. The lemma of GIVE
has different morphological representations: give, gives, given, gave, giving, and
to give” (1991; 173)
|26 A P, Santillén Grimm
subordinated to the meaning of the base (Hausmann 1989). This
directionality implies that the base selects a specific meaning of the element
it co-occurs with, a phenomenon that Auson (1982) denominated
seinantic tailoring, In this way, the meaning of sa‘id in hagz sa‘id should
not be translated as ‘happy’, but as ‘good’, Moreover, the opposite of haze
sa‘id is not hag hasin, but haze ta‘is.
Due to this hypotactic relationship, structures such as noun + wa +
noun (al-xayr wa-lSarr) or verb + wa + verb (fara wa-halaga) cannot be
considered collocations but rather lexical couplets or binomials (Josnsrons
1991).
‘TRANSPARENCY
Collocations are semantically transparent, which means that the meaning of
the whole equals the sum of the meanings of each of its components. For
this reason, collocations may be easily decoded by the speaker who knows
the meaning of the base and that of the collocate, It must, however, be
clarified that the semantic compositionality of collocations may be partial,
s there are numerous cases in which one of its components acquires a
figurative sense, as in fagil al-dam or dayyaqa sadrahu, Yet, the metaphorical
sense of this kind of collocations does not become as pervasive as in the
case of pure idioms or proverbs, in which philogenetic and/or pragmatic
knowledge of the expression is required in order to interpret the image
compositionally.
SEMANTIC ACCURACY
Collocations entail a considerable level of semantic accuracy, as much as
they capture precise extra linguistic facts. In this sense, collocations are
created in order to fulfil lexical gaps that have not been fulfilled by one
Jexeme. In some cases, an independent lexeme may have a similar meaning
to the one expressed by a collocation, yet the use of one or the other implies
a slightly different connotation; this is the case of verb + nota
collocations in which the verb is a ‘light verb’: qarrara vs. ’axada garar;
sifada vs. qaddama mustéada,
3. Components of collocations
Despite their invaluable contribution to lexical studies and lexicography,
classical Arab scholars did not recognize collocation as an independent
linguistic phenomenon (Emery 1991: 63; E1-Grmet 2006), and, thus, no
particular term was allotted to this type of multi-word units. It was not until
the early 60s that Arab scholars began to show interest in collocation,Collocation in Modern Standard Arabic revisited ar
mainly motivated by the rescarch of the Firthian school.* Since then, several
terms have been proposed to refer to collocation yet, hitherto, no agreement
has been reached on a unified term to denominate this phenomenon.
Probably, the most consolidated term is al-talazum al-lafgiyy’, though several
other terms have been or are still used: al-musahaba al-lugawiyya, tawafug al-
alimat, al-mutawaridat al-lafeiyya, al-tagammutt al-sabita/al-mutakarrira/al-
mutawatira, al-ittiba, al-tatdbu’, al-tadamm. From our point of view, the root
{Lz-m)} is more pertinent than {s-h-b}, as the latter implies exclusively the
idea of ‘co-oceuitrence’ while the former also refers to the idea of ‘constraint,
restriction’, Morcover, the idea of mutual lexical attraction is better
captured by verbal form VI.
Apart from the base (nawdt al-talézum’) and the collocate [mulazim
(al-nawat)], there are several other concepts closely related to the
collocational phenomenon, the most central ones of which will be explained
next.
COLLOCATIONAL SPAN (mada al-talézum)
It is the distance between collocates measured in words, Siwc.am et al,
(1974: 21) propose an optimum span of ~4/ +4, i. e. four character spaces
to the left or to the right of the base. Nonetheless, as Enery (1991: 58)
points out, “a major problem in the description of collocations is that the
phenomenon is 50 diffuse, collocational ‘chains’ frequently extending over
sentence or even paragraph boundaries”, From our point of view, the
collocational span may be useful to detect collocations in large corpora;
however, conclusions based on quantitative results should be contrasted and
complemented by semantic considerations.
COLLOCATIONAL RANGE (al-q@ima al-talézumiyya)
It is the set of words that hold a similar potential collocational use with the
base. The collocational range often comprises synonymous or near-synon-
5 JR. Finrs (1890-1960) is considered one of the pioneers in the field of lexical
studies. His most relevant followers were M.A.K, Hatupay, TF, Mrrcneut, and
JMcH. Sweuarr.
6 This term was first used by Bi-Hassan (1982; cf, B.-Gente! 2006: 435).
7 Most of the Atabie terms in this paper have been translated by the author. ‘Az>
‘at-‘Aziz (1990), instead, proposes the following terms: collocation: al-musahaba,
base: majsil, collocate: musafib, collocational span: al-masafa, collocational
range: al-mada, collocational cluster: ‘ungdd, environment: al-muhit.ymous words, but it may also involve lexemes that belong to different
semantic fields, as noted below:
sallama
UPWARD/DOWNWARD COLLOCATION (al-taldézum —_al-tasa‘udiyy/al-
tandtzuliyy)
‘An upward collocation is a collocation in which the collocate is quan-
titatively more frequent than the base (xata’ kabir), whereas in a downward
collocation the base is more frequent than the collocate (@ahiz al-‘aynayn)’.
According to Sixcuur (1991: 116), an “upward collocation, of course, is the
weaker pattern in statistical terms, and the words tend to be elements of
grammatical frames, or superordinates, Downward collocation by contrast
gives us a semantic analysis of a word.”
SIMPIE/COMPLEX COLLOCATION (al-talazum al-basit/al-murakkab)
Kone (2001: 44) distinguishes between simple and complex collocations.
‘The former are collocations that involve two or more lexemes (gind fais,
aghaga bisl-buk@), while the latter involve a lexeme and an idiomatic
expression [afiga (‘an gahr qalb)]. In the taxonomy proposed in this paper
we only take into consideration simple collocations.
CHAINED COLLOCATION (al-taldzum al-mutasalsal)
‘They are series of two or more collocations that share a common element,
as in: lafiba dawr fa'“@l (= la'tba dawr + dawr foal), or rismat 2awrdq
maliyya (= rimat°awrag + ’awrdg maliyya).
4, Anew taxonomy of collocations in MSA
‘The classifications of collocations in Arabie that have been proposed so far
pose two major problems. On the one hand, they highly depend on English
lexical studies as a conceptual framework (Banuwai 2006: 137): Emany's
8 In the examples provided the base is oblique and the collocate bold oblique.Collocation in Modern Standard Arabie revisited 29
(1991) taxonomy essentially mirrors Cow's (1981, 1983) ‘composite units’;
in Hoosiann’s (1993) and Harm’ (2002, 2004) lexicographical researches,
Benson et al.’s (1986) classification has served as a key reference on which
to base their taxonomies, The consequences of resorting to the English
approach can be misleading, as several crucial aspects of Arabic collocations
have been overlooked or, at best, mistreated,
On the other hand, classifications of collocations in Arabic have tended
to mix different linguistic levels of analysis. This is mainly so in Guazaua’s
work (1993a), in which he blends syntactic, semantic, and stylistic aspects
of collocations (Ai-Brast 2005: 39-42). Hoostann (1993) also combines
syntactic and semantic scales since, in addition to parts of speech, he uses
synonymy and antonymy as categorizing criteria. Furthermore, both
Hooctanp and Harz (2002, 2004) consider copulative constructions as
collocations, disregarding the hypotactic relationship that there must be
between the base and the collocate.
In the taxonomy presented below, we have considered two principles
that, from our point of view, contribute to the development of a more
Arabie-driven typology of collocations. First, we base on an Arabic grammar
perspective. Second, in order to avoid the overlapping of different linguistic
levels, we have sorted out a three-level classification based exclusively on
syntax (parts of speech and grammatical functions), even though we will
also comment on several crucial lexical and semantic aspects.
Our taxonomy starts out from a macro level that includes four basic
types of collocations: A, B, G, and D. At this level, we exclusively consider
the basic parts of speech in Arabie: verb, noun, and particles. Upon this
preliminary macro level, a first set of subcategories is built, in which certain
grammatical functions and further differentiations of parts of speech are
taken into account: NowNasjabrama “aqd/inifag; ’abr°a dimmatahu; ittaxada *igree ay; ?atdra Suktikahuy;
rasdala al-sitara; *aflaga/fataha al-nar Cala); ?alqa muhadara/baydn/al-
gaibad; ‘akrama al-gar; alsaqa tuhma; °amat al-litam; badala guhd/masetty;
ballaga tahiyat/da‘awe...
Rradication-nullification
>abfala sibr/maf tl; Zabtala/xaraga qdntn; ?axlafa al-rag@; *alga maw'id;
Sankara alegamil; tand ‘an ‘asmihi; Zahada_ bi-LJamil/ma‘rif/nisma;
Jammada hisdb; xaffafa al-sura; nagada itifaaiyyas farraza al-sufii, fadda
iGtimat; fasaxa al-aqd/al-ta’aqud/al-xutba; qata‘a al-dagat...
Other
ata bit-mustara’; *axada bi-re’y; ’axada ‘ald “atigihi; tabadala al-are;
tahammala masiilliyya; tahayyana furga; tagammasa Saxsiyya; takabbada
garraba hazgahu; haddada hadaf; hakkama ‘aql; ra'a gurif; rakaba
hawahu; taba *ila ruSdihi; facaha bila.
At this point, we would like to underline the difference between (verb +
part) + noun (A2b) and verb + (part + noun) (B) collocations. In the for-
mer type, the verb takes the prepositional phrasepo obligatorily’, whereas in
the latter the prepositional phrase is complementary and has an adverbial
function, Because of this, the collocational span between the node and the
collocate is usually Jarger in B collocations than in A2b.
Finally, because of its frequent use in Arabie, we have included a third
subcategory. that consists of verb + noUMauin (A2c). In this subtype, the
‘main function of the cognate accusative is to intensify the action of the
verb, and that is why it is usually translated into English as a verb + adverb
construction. Moreover, it is not uncommon that cognate accusatives be
modified by an adjective, turning into chained collocations.
Verb + nounmajng’ + adj)
sabla bal@an (hasanan); ’adraka ?idrikan (Kuliyyan); insahaba insihaban
(kamilan); ihtamma ihtiméman (baligan); hall hallan (Bidriyyan); xadaa
xuditan (tamman); sdhama musahamatan (fadlatan)...
‘A3 collocations consist of a verb followed by the circumstantial
accusative structure (hal), which is usually expressed by an active participle,
but that could also be a passive participle, an adjective or a masdar (Rvoinc
9. Bearing in mind that transitivity in Arabic may be expressed directly (verb +
noun) or by means of a particle (verb + part + noun).Collocation in Modern Standard Atabic revisited 33
2005: 283-4), From a semantic point of view, hal collocations indicate the
manner or the intensity in which the action is carried out, and, in this way,
they mostly coincide with English verb + adverb collocations.
Verb + nouns
ahaa “lman; ardahu gatilan; infagara gadban/gédiban/dahikan; thtazza
taraban/farahan; tadawwara gi‘an; tasabbaba/tafassada ‘arqan; halla
dayfan (bi-ald); xarra saran; xarra mugsiyan Calayhi); tara farahan...
B collocations consist of a verb and a prepositional phrase. The structure
of B collocations overlaps with that of A2b, even though in each type of
collocation the prepositional phrase behaves quite differently, as high-
lighted above,
Verb + part + noun
>raxlada *ilé al-raha; irtama fi?ahdan; istamat fi al-difa’ Can); *ashaba fil-
hadit/kalam; istarsala fi-l-hadit; istagraqa fi-l-buk@ /eafkir/dahk; intazara
‘ald al-xatt; ZahaSa/inxarata bi--buk@; Schada fi sabil...
G collocations happen to be a wide-ranging macto category, mainly
because we have adopted the Arabic sense of ‘noun’ and, therefore, apart
from nouns per se, we also associate adjectives to it. Thus, it is only when
we move down to the first subcategorical level that substantial differences
can be appreciated. There are three main C subcategories, where Cl and G2
overlap structurally, and C2 and C3, semantically.
C1 collocations are annexation structures Cidafas), in which noun, is the
base and noun, the collocate, Due to its formal and semantic features this
category may sometimes be confused with other multi-word lexical units
and, consequently, over enlarged. The types of *idafa most frequently in-
volved in collocations are those that express identity, possession, agent,
object, and compositional relationships, and, to a less extent, those that
express contents, and purpose.!”
“Agent and object *idéfa collocations derive from A1 and A2 subcategories
respectively. However, masdars should be registered as a noun only when
10 We follow Ryome’s typology (2005: 206-211), who classifies *idafas into eleven
categories in terms of the semantic relationships between the mudaf and the
mudaf ilayhi: identity relationship, possessive relationship, partitive relationship,
agent relationship, object relationship, compositional relationship, measurement
relationship, contents relationship, purposa,relationship, quotation or title rela~
nnship, cause relationship.34 P, Santilln Grimm
they have aequired an independent meaning (Hoos.ano 1993: 80)."' ‘This is
especially true from a lexicographic point of view, considering the impor-
tance of saving space in dictionary making, Corpus searching can help us
identify what masdars should be considered lexically autonomous.
Agent
arin abratd/al-t@ira; t@azzum al-mawgif/al-hdla; xarir al-me; xusiif al-
gamar; sarir al-bab,
Object
>inléq al-nar; tagrir al-hdla (al-gawwiyya); tanfid xutta; tabat al-mardg;
nazet al-silah...
When there is a compositional or contents relationship between noun;
and noun, *iddfa collocations are lexical variations of D2 collocations
(noun, + min + penoun;):
Compositional
bagat zuhar; tavl nail; sirb samak; isdbat lusts; Cungitd “nab...
Contents
>ystuavanat az5 barmil zayt/bitral/nafy; ‘ulbat sagirir/kibrit; fingn qchwa/
By.
The most problematic type of Gl collocations are those that express
. identity and possession relationships and, to a less extent, those that
express a purpose relationship. This is so because they may be easily
confused with *idafa compounds. Indeed, both types of combinations
are quite near each other within the phraseological continuum (see Table
1), and thus share a few similarities (polilexicality, arbitrariness,
combinatorial preference); yet, compounds are characterised by having a
higher level of idiomaticity (and, therefore, fixedness) and, above all, by
being multi-word units that refer to a single extra-linguistic entity. In
>idafa collocations, on the other hand, each member maintains its own
semantic value. Having clarified this, we must admit that fuzziness
11 Hoostano points out that the same principle applies for participles considered
adjectives,
12 Hasan (1975; cf. Ewsey 1988c: 34) distinguishes two types of compounds: al-
tarkib alidafiyy (me ward) and al-tarkib al-wasfiyy (gara gawwiyya). The first
kind may be easily confused with Ci collocations, and the second, with C3.
|
|Collocation in Modern Standard Arabic revisited 35
Detween both constructions occurs quite often, especially considering
that collocations are also stored in the mind as chunks.
Possession
Parkin al2istdm; (ami) *asqa al‘Glam; *amir al-mustimin; ?afaq al-bilad;
amal 2@if; -aman kadiba; bard
fa massa; hadit fagi; harb dartis/
Expected quality
>axclar yen iste salim/sahiy; ’asl@ mutanatira; burhan sai /qarts hall”
garar hasim...
it must also be emphasized that the adjective in C3 collocations may also
be expressed by means of an *iddfa (gayr + adjective), a negative verbal
phrase (ld + verb), or an absolute negation (la + noun).
Noun + (gayr + adjective)
siyara gayr rosmiyya; xabar gayr sabidh/oneakkad; furug gayr qantniyya;
nusxa gayr ?asliyya..
Noun + (la + verb)
jw? a yeuagassa? (mind; xabar 1a yusaddag; danb ta yugtafar; marad la
ydinn
Noun + (la + noun)
intisar ld gubar Calayhi; itihamat la Yass (ahd); tasarruf ta me’xad (fh;
muskila ta fardr (minha)...Collocation in Modern Standard Arabic revisited 37
Similarly to the case of ’idafa collocations, noun + adjective collocations
tend to be confused with adjectival compounds (al-tarkib al-wasfiyy) (see
footnote 11), In general, we may differentiate them according to the func-
tion of the adjective: in compounds it has a classifying function Custil
babriyy, Sadibiyya ginsiyya) whereas in C3 collocations it is intensifying or
naturally attributable; yet, once again, ambiguity remains.
As for simile collocations, which have an ‘adjective + ka/mitl + noun’
structure (xafifa ka-l-fardéa, raviq ka-Lxayzaran), we have decided not to
deal with them in the present paper because they are complex collocations.
D collocations consist of a noun + part + nounz, This macro category
comprises two main subgroups: noun, + part + noun, (D1), and noun, +
min + ymoun, (D2). In D1 collocations the noun, is usually a magdar (tiga
bi-Lnafs, sirdé ‘ala sulfa), though it may also be other types of nouns Cuslab
fel-tafkir, x@in ItL‘ahd), or an adjective (xilin min al-rasas, farid min
naw‘hi); noun, is usually definite but it may occasionally be indefi
(ta“allum/ta‘tim ‘an bud. DI collocations are not semantically restricted,
and the particle may be any harf Zarr (including min but with a different
connotation from the one in D2 collocations)."*
In D2 collocations the noun, is definite and it is the base of the
collocation, D2 collocations are semantically restricted having two main
functions: they either denote “the larger unit to which a single member
belongs” or “the specific, concrete, small unit of something larger, more
general” (Brvson et al, 1986: xxxiit).
Large unit
sirb min al-samak; hwzma min al-hatab; ratal min al-sayyarat; taqa/bagat
min al-ward; ‘isabat min al-lusiis; ‘cungiid min al-inab/al-karm; qati min al-
ganam/al-d? ab/al-xirfan/al-ni'@g/al-fila/al-gimal; qurs min alasbirin;
wabil min al/sat@im/al-’akadib/al-rasds/al-qanabil..
Small unit
bug’a min al?ard; guréa min al-m@; xusla min Sar; darra min turdb/ards
aia min al-battix; Sartha/wadra min al-lahm; qubsa min al-mill; qurs min
al-laymiin; fass/sinn min al-tawm; muka“ab min al-sukkar...
‘As pointed out above, two other collocational structures may be used in
order to express these two semantic functions: an *iddfa (baat ward; sirb
15 For a monographic study on noun + adjective collocations in Arabic see
‘Mo‘rasins (2003), .38 P, Santilién Grimm
samak, firg/tawl nakl; qatib sikiila) or a noun + adjective construction
(hustid “askariyya; Saft ramliyy; huzma dewiyya; tafiya Falidtyya).
It should also be underlined that the degree of lexical cohesion between
the base and the collocate varies significantly according to the semantic
relationship between them, In some cases it is clear that noun, (the base)
draws the presence of noun; (‘ungiid min al-karm/“inab; qati min al-ganam),
whereas in others the noun, combinability has expanded metaphorically to
an extent that it co-appears with a wide range of nouns among which there
is no evident semantic relationship: wabil min al-matar/al-Suhub/al-Sat@im/
al-qanabil.
As a final note, we would like to draw attention to the fact that our
taxonomy does not include @ category equivalent to English adverb +
adjective collocations (deeply absorbed, strictly accurate). The reason is that
in Arabic the intensification of an adjective has traditionally been expressed
by means other than an adverb: a single lexeme [fagaan (= gu‘an giddan),
wasim (= Samil fiddan); manhik (= ta‘ban Ziddan)|, a comparative structure
Casbar min al-himar, asf min al-m@), or a simile (xafif ka-l-farda, wadih
wudih al-Sams). Adjectives may also be modified by a reduced set of
complements (mainly giddan, haqgan, filan, and li--gaya); however, the
frequent combinability of these with almost any adjective makes it contra-
dictory to consider them collocations as no lexical restrictions apply.
5, Conclusions and further research
In this paper we have approached the phenomenon of collocation in MSA.
from a phraseological perspective, an area which, to date, has mainly
devoted its research to other combinatorial aspects of lexis, Our
contribution has been theoretical and mainly descriptive, its main goal
being to provide a systematic Arabic-driven taxonomy of collocations in
MSA.
Within our taxonomy we have proved that collocations in MSA may be
reduced to four basic syntactic groups upon which more detailed categories
may be devised. The fact that we have based our analysis on an Arabic
grammar perspective has shed some light on particular aspects of
collocations such as the fact that English verb + adverb collocations should
be conceived as two different categories in Arabic; that adjective + adverb
collocations are not a productive category in Arabic; or that there is a high
degree of lexical correspondence across categories.
‘As elements of the phraseological continuum, it is advisable to investigate
collocations considering the contact or even overlapping areas of colloca-Collocation in Modern Standard Arabic revisited 39
tions with other lexical strings. Research topics such as differentiating
collocations from compounds, semantic implications of verbal patterns
within (sub-Jeategories, the role of the article, the behaviour of negative
structures, and the use of similar roots in both the base and the collocate
might be particularly appealing within the field of Arabic collocational
studies, Moreover, we believe that a closer collaboration between phraseo-
logy and corpus linguistics would reveal further fascinating aspects of
lexical patterning in Arabic.
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