Can context undo constructional meaning? A Construction Grammar study of French en situation de + NOUN

This article investigates the extent to which context can impact the meaning of a construction. It focuses on the French expression en situation de (‘in situation of’) + NOUN, whose meaning is contested among language users when specifically applied to human referents (e.g., en situation de handicap...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sophie Raineri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive 2024-11-01
Series:CogniTextes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cognitextes/2660
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:This article investigates the extent to which context can impact the meaning of a construction. It focuses on the French expression en situation de (‘in situation of’) + NOUN, whose meaning is contested among language users when specifically applied to human referents (e.g., en situation de handicap ‘disabled’, en situation de pauvreté ‘poor’). Analyzed as a constructional idiom, its meaning is mapped out on the basis of corpus data. Although a clash is consistently observed between the “circumstantial characterization” meaning arising from the constituent parts of the construction and the “inherent characterization” interpretation it typically receives in context, I argue that contextual pressure has not resulted in the obliteration of constructional meaning. En situation de + NOUN is shown to retain semantic and pragmatic properties that distinguish it from referentially equivalent expressions and ensure its longevity. In addition to making a contribution to research on euphemism and so-called ‘politically correct’ language, the article demonstrates the necessity to uphold the semantics/pragmatics distinction in usage-based Contruction Grammar (CxG) studies of language and language change.
ISSN:1958-5322