Collocation and Colligation
Collocation and Colligation
Kinds of Colligation
"Although based on Firth's concept, the more widespread Sinclairian use
of colligation describes the co-occurrence of a class of grammatical items with a
specified node. For instance, regarding the node true feelings, [John McH.] Sinclair notes
that 'there is a strong colligation with a possessive adjective...' Other kinds of colligation
might be a preference for a particular verb tense, negative particles, modal
verbs, participles, that- clauses, and so on. The basic idea of colligation is that just as a
lexical item may be primed to co-occur with another lexical item, so also it may be
primed to occur in or with a particular grammatical function.
Colligation and Verbs of Perception
"The class of verbs of perception such as hear, notice, see, watch enters
into colligation with the sequence of object + either the bare infinitive or the -ing form;
e.g. We heard the visitors leave/leaving.
We noticed him walk away/walking away.
We heard Pavarotti sing/singing.
We saw it fall/falling. The term [colligation] is far less general than the contrasting
term collocation."