Abstract

As researchers and practitioners are becoming more aware of the importance of multi-word items in English, there is little doubt that phrasal verbs deserve teaching attention in the classroom. However, there are thousands of phrasal verbs in English, and so the question for practitioners is which phrasal verbs to focus attention upon. Phrasal verb dictionaries typically try to be comprehensive, and this results in a very large number of phrasal verbs being listed, which does not help practitioners in selecting the most important ones to teach or test. There are phrasal verb lists available (Gardner and Davies, 2007; Liu, 2011), but these have a serious pedagogical shortcoming in that they do not account for polysemy. Research indicates that phrasal verbs are highly polysemous, having on average 5.6 meaning senses, although many of these are infrequent and peripheral. Thus practitioners also need guidance about which meaning senses are the most useful to address in instruction or tests. In response to this need, the PHrasal VErb Pedagogical List (PHaVE List) was developed. It lists the 150 most frequent phrasal verbs, and provides information on their key meaning senses, which cover 75%+ of the occurrences in the Corpus of Contemporary American English. The PHaVE List gives the percentage of occurrence for each of these key meaning senses, along with definitions and example sentences written to be accessible for second language learners, in the style of the General Service List (West, 1953). A users’ manual is also provided, indicating how to use the list appropriately.

Highlights

  • There are several reasons why English phrasal verbs1 (PVs) are important to learn

  • Liu searched a total of 8847 PVs, which is a very substantial number; among these, only the final 150 had at least 10 tokens per million words in either the Contemporary American English (COCA) or the British National Corpus (BNC), which suggests that the rest of the PVs may be too infrequent to be worth including on the list

  • This study shows that the vast majority of the most frequent PVs in English are polysemous, and that, on average, around two meaning senses account for at least 75% of all the occurrences of a single PV in the COCA

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Summary

Introduction

There are several reasons why English phrasal verbs (PVs) are important to learn. The first is that they have been found to be very frequent in language use. Based on a corpus search of the British National Corpus (BNC), Gardner and Davies (2007) estimate that learners will encounter, on average, one PV in every 150 words of English they are exposed to. Gardner and Davies (2007) found that each of the most frequent English PVs had 5.6 meaning senses on average. These meaning senses often cannot be conveyed by a single word equivalent, or may carry connotations that their single word equivalent does not have (Cornell, 1985). Using PVs is crucial to fluent English and sounding native-like. Because PVs are widely used in spoken informal discourse, failure to use PVs in such situations is likely to make language sound unnatural and non-idiomatic (Siyanova & Schmitt, 2007)

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