Abstract

When restrictive adverbs are negated, an additive reading is produced (e.g., not only). This is particularly common in correlative constructions with a corrective part optionally introduced by but (e.g., not just in England but also in Scotland), but can also appear in other syntactic contexts. This study investigates formal and functional variation in the use of the four most common variants of negated restrictives ( not only, not just, not simply, and not merely) from the perspective of constructional and usage-based approaches to language. The study is based on a dataset of 1599 tokens, annotated for formal, functional, and extralinguistic variables, and is analyzed using hierarchical configural frequency analysis. The contrastive correlative construction not only X but ( also) Y appears as the central grammatical context for negated restrictives in English. In addition to its high frequency, not only displays the least variability in both form and function, which suggests a high degree of conventionalization. The less frequent variants of negated restrictives have more diffuse usage profiles, suggesting they are less conventionalized and may be emergent constructions which have not yet conventionalized into stable parts of the language. Methodologically, the study suggests an alternative to modeling alternations, which enables the detection of different degrees of conventionalization and which avoids conceptualizing alternations as choices conditioned by independent variables.

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