@article{oai:dwcla.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000761, author = {服部, 匡 and HATTORI, Tadasu}, journal = {総合文化研究所紀要, Bulletin of Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture Doshisha Women’s College of Liberal Arts}, month = {Jul}, note = {application/pdf, AN10052143-20130708-104, This paper, along with three preceding papers by the author (Hattori 2011b, 2012b, 2012d), presents an exploratory study of a corpus comprising the minutes of the National Diet of Japan on the co-occurrence patterns between nouns with an underlying gradable scale and basic scalar adjectives such as takai/hikui 'high/low,' ookii/tiisai 'large/small,' tuyoi/yowai 'strong/weak,' ooi/sukunai 'many/few,' koi/usui 'dense/thick,' omoi/karui 'heavy/light,' and fukai/asai 'deep/shallow,' which in the sense of Cruse (1986), constitute ""polar antonym"" pairs. The study focused on a frequency comparison of the members of each antonym pair (i.e., each supra/sub term) and analyzed the frequency distribution from three viewpoints. These analyses led to three major findings. First, for all the antonym pairs except koi/usui, the bulk of the nouns appear more frequently in collocation with the supra term than with the sub term. Second, for many nouns, the antonym pairs ookii/tiisai, ooi/sukunai, and koi/usui show co-occurrence patterns significantly different from those of other pairs that have quasi-synonymous meanings in the collocates in question. Specifically, the supra term is used with higher frequency in the ookii/tiisai pair, and the sub term with higher frequency in the ooi/sukunai and koi/usui pairs. Third, from a diachronic viewpoint, many nouns show increased collocational frequency over time with the supra term in the takai/hikui pair. Further, many nouns show decreased collocational frequency over time with the sub terms in the ooi/sukunai and ookii/tiisai pairs., 論文 (Article)}, pages = {104--120}, title = {反義関係に基づいた尺度的形容詞と名詞の共起傾向の分析 : 国会会議録のデータから}, volume = {30}, year = {2013}, yomi = {ハットリ, タダス} }