Abstract

In this article, we draw a comparison between causal prepositions and causal connectives and present them as alternative realizations of the underlying causal situation. It is our aim to investigate under which constraints a language user tends to select either of both causal alternatives. It appeared from a quantitative corpus analysis that these constraints are primarily pragmatic in nature, since they have to do in the first place with the discourse domain and with the management of given/new information. This is also confirmed by an analysis of the grammatical and lexical constraints on causal prepositions and connectives.

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