Openai/695e35ca-c9c0-8003-8b44-8517505d1bda
This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-2[edit | edit source]
User: Uploaded an image[edit | edit source]
Uploaded an image
Assistant: Got it — thanks for sharing the screenshot.[edit | edit source]
Got it — thanks for sharing the screenshot. Let me describe what I’m seeing and you can tell me what you’d like to do next.
The command you ran is:
grep '\-N\:mod\:A :A\taccident\t' mp.deps.sort.txt | tail -165 | headAnd the results look like dependency-pattern output (probably from a parsed corpus):
Each row has the structure:
ADJECTIVE -N:mod:A accident 4Meaning:
- ADJECTIVE — the modifying word
- -N:mod:A — dependency label showing adjective modifier of a noun
- accident — the head noun
- 4 — frequency (how many times this pattern appears)
So lines like:
big -N:mod:A accident 4
terrible -N:mod:A accident 4
spectacular -N:mod:A accident 4mean:
✔️ summarize or rank common adjectives modifying “accident”[edit | edit source]
✔️ extract all adjectives with frequency above a threshold ✔️ rewrite the grep to be simpler / safer ✔️ convert results into a table or CSV ✔️ interpret linguistically (collocation strength, usefulness for materials, etc.)
Or if you had a specific question about this output, let me know — what would you like to achieve with this data?
User: What word relation pairs in this should be consider collocations in written, formal setting?[edit | edit source]
What word relation pairs in this should be consider collocations in written, formal setting? Why?
Assistant: Great question.[edit | edit source]
Great question. Short answer: in a written, formal register, the collocations are usually those pairs that are:
- denotative and technical rather than emotional
- semantically selective (the adjective fits a specific subtype of the noun)
- stable in specialized writing (science, policy, legal, academic prose)
- not merely any adjective + noun, but show restricted combinability
Let’s go through the pairs you showed and divide them.
🟢 Strong collocations for formal written English[edit | edit source]
These sound fully natural in academic / policy / technical prose:
- drug-related accident
- nuclear-plant accident
- unreported accident
✔ Why these count as collocations[edit | edit source]
- restricted meaning - “drug-related accident” is not simply “an accident that happens to involve drugs” — it’s a recognized category in public health and criminology.
- low substitutability - you don’t usually say drug-connected accident or drug-linked accident in formal writing
- domain-specific usage - these occur in medicine, safety engineering, transportation studies, insurance, etc.
- informational, not emotional - these adjectives classify rather than evaluate
These are close to terminological collocations (sometimes bordering on technical terms).
🟡 Acceptable, but context-dependent formal collocations[edit | edit source]
These may count as collocations in specialized disciplines:
- underwater accident (diving / naval / marine safety context)
- typical accident (risk analysis, case classification)
- occasional accident (epidemiology / child development reporting)
These are:
- less fixed than the first group
- still formal in tone
- classificatory rather than emotional
They tend to occur where the writer is doing taxonomy or categorization of accidents.
🔴 Not collocations in formal written English (informal or evaluative)[edit | edit source]
These are generally not considered formal collocations:
- big accident
- terrible accident
- spectacular accident
✘ Why these are not preferred in formal writing[edit | edit source]
- evaluative or emotional - “terrible” and “spectacular” express attitude, not classification
- informal register - “big accident” is conversation-level; formal writing uses major/serious accident
- journalistic flavor - “spectacular accident” occurs in headlines, not academic prose
Even if frequent, they reflect register mismatch, so they are not “collocations of formal written English.”
- In formal writing, you would expect:
- major accident
- serious accident
- rather than big accident or terrible accident
🟣 Special note: atomic accident[edit | edit source]
- borderline / uncommon today
- historically used (1950s–1970s)
- now replaced by nuclear accident
- feels dated or non-technical in current formal writing
So: it is collocationally meaningful, but diachronically restricted.
✅ Rules of thumb for deciding collocations in formal writing[edit | edit source]
A pair counts as a collocation in formal written registers if:
- it shows semantic specialization (classifies a subtype)
- cannot be freely replaced by synonyms
- occurs in technical or institutional texts
- lacks emotional coloring
- expresses what kind of X, not how the writer feels about X
Compare:
| Pair | Register | Collocation status | | ---------------------- | ------------------- | ------------------ | | drug-related accident | formal/technical | strong collocation | | nuclear-plant accident | formal/technical | strong collocation | | unreported accident | formal/legal/admin | strong collocation | | underwater accident | technical context | medium | | typical accident | academic analysis | medium | | big accident | informal speech | no | | terrible accident | emotional narrative | no | | spectacular accident | journalistic | no |
If you’d like, I can also:[edit | edit source]
- compute MI/t-score collocation strength if you give counts
- map these to register labels (spoken, fiction, news, academic)
- suggest better academic alternatives (e.g., major vs big, severe vs terrible)
- extract formal collocations from your file automatically
Just tell me which direction you want to go.
User: suggest better academic alternatives[edit | edit source]
suggest better academic alternatives
Assistant: Great — here are more academic, precise alternatives for the pairs in your list, with short explanations so you can see…[edit | edit source]
Great — here are more academic, precise alternatives for the pairs in your list, with short explanations so you can see the nuance.
I’ll group them by what they improve: formality, precision, and classification.
1️⃣ Replace big accident[edit | edit source]
Prefer adjectives that quantify scope or impact, not size.
| Informal | Academic alternatives | Why better | | ------------ | --------------------- | ------------------------------------------------- | | big accident | major accident | neutral, institutional tone (government, reports) | | | serious accident | emphasizes severity of consequences | | | significant accident | used in research, implies measurable impact | | | large-scale accident | emphasizes number of people/extent |
- Example:
- A major accident occurred at the site.
2️⃣ Replace terrible accident[edit | edit source]
Avoid emotional evaluation; describe outcome objectively.
| Informal | Academic alternatives | Why better | | ----------------- | --------------------- | --------------------------------- | | terrible accident | fatal accident | specifies death | | | severe accident | focuses on degree of harm | | | catastrophic accident | system-level failure, very formal | | | high-impact accident | policy/engineering tone |
- Example:
- The study examined factors associated with severe accidents.
3️⃣ Replace spectacular accident[edit | edit source]
This sounds journalistic or sensational.
| Informal | Academic alternatives | Why better | | -------------------- | -------------------------- | ------------------------------ | | spectacular accident | high-profile accident | widely reported | | | visually dramatic accident | descriptive, but still neutral | | | catastrophic accident | when consequences were extreme |
- Example:
- The incident became a high-profile accident due to media attention.
4️⃣ Keep — already formal / technical[edit | edit source]
These are already suitable for academic writing:
| Expression | Notes | | ---------------------- | ------------------------------------------------- | | drug-related accident | standard in health/criminal justice | | nuclear-plant accident | technical, though nuclear accident is more common | | unreported accident | administrative/legal tone | | underwater accident | fine in marine/aviation/diving studies | | typical accident | acceptable when referring to types or patterns | | occasional accident | ok when talking about frequency distributions |
- Slight improvement:
- nuclear accident (more general, more frequent)
- unreported incidents/accidents (when multiple)
5️⃣ Borderline / dated[edit | edit source]
| Expression | Academic suggestion | | --------------- | ----------------------- | | atomic accident | Prefer nuclear accident |
“Atomic accident” sounds historical (Cold War era).
Quick rule-of-thumb for academic style[edit | edit source]
When you see an adjective like:
- big, terrible, spectacular, crazy, awful…
ask:
- “Does this describe impact or classification, or just emotion?”
If it expresses emotion → replace with something measurable:
- severity → severe, major, catastrophic
- outcome → fatal, non-fatal
- scope → large-scale, widespread
- reporting status → reported, unreported
- profile → high-profile
If you’d like, I can next:[edit | edit source]
✔ rewrite your sample lines into academic style ✔ generate discipline-specific options (engineering vs. medical vs. legal) ✔ automatically replace informal collocations across your corpus
Just tell me 👍
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "Dependency Analysis Suggestions". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2026-01-08.