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This book highlights research that expands on our knowledge of
second- language collocation acquisition. It presents original
findings based on the largest collocation database to date,
encompassing over 8,000 collocations: verb + noun, adjective +
noun, and noun + noun. These collocations, collected from a
one-million-learner corpus, were not confined to English as a
foreign language (EFL) learners at a particular proficiency level,
but also included learners at three levels. As such, the book
provides a panoramic view regarding L2 collocation acquisition, not
only in terms of learners' acquisition of different types of
collocations, but in terms of the developmental patterns in L2
collocation learning. One major discovery is that there is a
collocation lag as learners' proficiency levels rise, which is
associated with vocabulary increase, in particular semantic
domains-a remarkable insight for second-language acquisition
researchers, English teachers and EFL learners alike. The findings
reported shed new light on how collocations are acquired by EFL
learners, offering guidance on how they can best be taught. In
closing, the book discusses pedagogical aspects that arise from
considering how learners can be helped with collocation learning.
This book highlights research that expands on our knowledge of
second- language collocation acquisition. It presents original
findings based on the largest collocation database to date,
encompassing over 8,000 collocations: verb + noun, adjective +
noun, and noun + noun. These collocations, collected from a
one-million-learner corpus, were not confined to English as a
foreign language (EFL) learners at a particular proficiency level,
but also included learners at three levels. As such, the book
provides a panoramic view regarding L2 collocation acquisition, not
only in terms of learners' acquisition of different types of
collocations, but in terms of the developmental patterns in L2
collocation learning. One major discovery is that there is a
collocation lag as learners' proficiency levels rise, which is
associated with vocabulary increase, in particular semantic
domains-a remarkable insight for second-language acquisition
researchers, English teachers and EFL learners alike. The findings
reported shed new light on how collocations are acquired by EFL
learners, offering guidance on how they can best be taught. In
closing, the book discusses pedagogical aspects that arise from
considering how learners can be helped with collocation learning.
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