Flipping the on/off switch: Change in progress in the prepositional complements of verbs like base
Guy Tabachnick, Laurel MacKenzie
November 2024
 

Traditionally, verbs like base have combined with the preposition on to express a meaning of derivation (based on). However, many writing in a US context have noticed the rapid rise of based off (of) alongside based on (Curzan 2013, Behrens 2014, Janda 2020). In this paper, we document the relative increase of off in two English-language corpora in the verb base and six other verbs. The results show a clear real-time trend of increasing use of off, with some differences in the course of the change across different verbs. We also see an increase in use of off in apparent time, which we infer from the topical organization of comments in one of our corpora, the social media site Reddit.
Format: [ pdf ]
Reference: lingbuzz/008381
(please use that when you cite this article)
Published in: accepted at English Language and Linguistics
keywords: variation, prepositions, lexical diffusion, apparent-time study, corpus methodology, syntax
previous versions: v2 [August 2024]
v1 [August 2024]
Downloaded:602 times

 

[ edit this article | back to article list ]