English edit

Noun edit

collocant (plural collocants)

  1. A word which collocates with another.
    • 1991, Journal de linguistique arabe:
      Such verbs may come to encapsulate the meaning of the collocant, in which case the body-part may be omitted. The degree to which this occurs varies : 'ațraqa (=he bowed his head) , but not *šammara (he bared [] )
    • 2003, D. J. Allerton, Stretched Verb Constructions in English, Routledge, →ISBN, page 248:
      It seems natural to assume that a deviant collocation should be corrected by changing the collocant rather than the base word, but some of the non-native speaker examples cited by Howarth (1998: 177–85) should probably be corrected ...
    • 2001, Dirasat: Human and social sciences:
      In (13), for example, the learners failed to recognize the collocant baked and compensated for that with another verb (cooked / produced) which share with baked the feature of making food on fire / heat.
    • 2018, Richard J. Whitt, Diachronic Corpora, Genre, and Language Change, John Benjamins Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 45:
      Annotated screenshot of the web-based DiaCollo user interface displaying a dynamic tag-cloud visualization of the 10 best common noun collocates per 50- year epoch for the collocant Revolution over the interval 1600–1899.

Latin edit

Alternative forms edit

Verb edit

collocant

  1. third-person plural present active indicative of collocō