The English Comparative Correlative has been studied in, e.g., Fillmore (1986) and [Hoffmann (2017)](https://doi.org/10.1017/S1360674317000181). [Weissweiler et al. (2022)](https://aclanthology.org/2022.emnlp-main.746.pdf) ask not how an LLM can be a copilot for construction grammarian doing linguistics, but rather, whether an LLM can recognize instances of a fully worked-out construction, state its syntax, and understand its meaning. We have accordingly asked an LLM current as of 2023-04-28 about the English Comparative Correlative. The following is an exchange on 2023-04-28 with ChatGPT from OpenAI, running the GPT4 model. [1] User: ``` Answer as if you are a Construction Grammarian. English includes a construction called the "Comparative Correlative" construction. An example is "the more you eat, the fatter you get," In its main version, its FORM consists of two clauses, C1 followed by C2, each beginning with "the" and including a comparative adjective or a comparative adverb. Other examples include "the bigger they are, the harder they fall," "the more you yell, the hoarser you get." In its typical version, C1 presents the CAUSE and C2 presents the EFFECT produced by that CAUSE. Please present a Construction Grammar analysis of the Comparative Correlative, as a FORM-MEANING pair, giving its FORM and then its MEANING. Please elaborate as much and as specifically as you can on this construction, going beyond the analysis provided in this prompt. ``` [2] ChatGPT: ``` As a Construction Grammarian, I would analyze the Comparative Correlative construction as a form-meaning pair with a specific syntactic structure and a certain semantic function. In Construction Grammar, language is seen as a collection of constructions, which are conventionalized form-meaning pairings. FORM: The Comparative Correlative construction can be schematically represented as follows: the [COMPARATIVE-ADJ/ADV] X, the [COMPARATIVE-ADJ/ADV] Y Where X and Y are constituents of the construction, and COMPARATIVE-ADJ/ADV represents a comparative adjective or adverb. The structure is characterized by: 1. Two clauses, C1 and C2, which are usually linked by a comma. 2. Each clause begins with the definite article "the." 3. Each clause contains a comparative adjective or adverb. 4. In most cases, the constituents X and Y are pronouns, noun phrases, or verb phrases. MEANING: The Comparative Correlative construction typically expresses a causal relationship between two situations or events. It indicates that an increase or decrease in the quality, state, or quantity expressed by C1 leads to a corresponding increase or decrease in the quality, state, or quantity expressed by C2. In other words, the construction highlights a proportional relationship between the two clauses, where C1 serves as the cause and C2 as the effect. The meaning can be schematically represented as: MORE/LESS (C1) -> MORE/LESS (C2) Variations in the construction may alter its meaning slightly. For instance, when the Comparative Correlative is used with negative forms, it conveys a sense of impossibility or extreme difficulty: the less you know, the better In this case, the meaning can be interpreted as: the lesser knowledge you possess about a particular matter, the better off you are. In summary, a Construction Grammar analysis of the Comparative Correlative construction considers both its form and meaning. The form consists of two clauses, C1 and C2, each beginning with "the" and including a comparative adjective or adverb. The meaning typically conveys a causal relationship between the two clauses, where C1 is the cause and C2 is the effect, often highlighting a proportional relationship between the situations or events described by the clauses. Variations in the construction may result in slightly different meanings, such as a sense of impossibility or extreme difficulty. ``` [3] User: ``` Now provide 10 examples of the Comparative Correlative in English, with as much variation in the details of the example as is consistent with the specification of the construction. For each, explain as fully as possible the intended meaning. ``` [4] ChatGPT: ``` Example: The more you practice, the better you become. 1. Meaning: As you practice more (C1), your skills improve proportionally (C2). Example: The less you sleep, the more tired you feel. 2. Meaning: A decrease in sleep (C1) leads to a proportional increase in tiredness (C2). Example: The faster she runs, the sooner she finishes the race. 3. Meaning: An increase in her running speed (C1) leads to a decrease in the time required to finish the race (C2). Example: The farther you go, the more you discover. 4. Meaning: As you travel greater distances (C1), you experience a corresponding increase in discoveries or learning (C2). Example: The higher the stakes, the more intense the competition. 5. Meaning: As the stakes of a situation increase (C1), the intensity of the competition increases proportionally (C2). Example: The less you know, the less you worry. 6. Meaning: A decrease in knowledge or awareness about a matter (C1) results in a proportional decrease in worry or anxiety (C2). Example: The more complex the problem, the longer it takes to solve. 7. Meaning: An increase in the complexity of a problem (C1) leads to a proportional increase in the time needed to solve it (C2). Example: The more crowded the room, the louder the noise. 8. Meaning: As the number of people in a room increases (C1), the noise level increases proportionally (C2). Example: The earlier you arrive, the better your chances of getting a seat. 9. Meaning: Arriving earlier (C1) leads to a proportional increase in the likelihood of securing a seat (C2). Example: The more ingredients you add, the more flavorful the dish becomes. 10. Meaning: As you add more ingredients to a dish (C1), the flavor of the dish increases proportionally (C2). These examples showcase variations in the details of the Comparative Correlative construction while maintaining the overall structure of the construction. Each example expresses a causal relationship between two situations or events, with C1 serving as the cause and C2 as the effect. The construction highlights the proportional relationship between the two clauses, conveying the idea that an increase or decrease in the quality, state, or quantity in C1 leads to a corresponding increase or decrease in the quality, state, or quantity in C2. ``` If you want to check more prompts, visit our [[Prompt Repo]]. ## References [1] Charles J Fillmore. 1986. Varieties of conditional sentences. In Eastern States Conference on Linguistics, volume 3, pages 163–182. [2] Thomas Hoffmann. 2017. Construction Grammar as Cognitive Structuralism: the interaction of constructional networks and processing in the diachronic evolution of English comparative correlatives. English Language and Linguistics 21.2: 349–373. Cambridge University Press 2017 [doi:10.1017/S1360674317000181](https://doi.org/10.1017/S1360674317000181). [3] Weissweiler, Leonie, Valentin Hofmann, Abdullatif Köksal, & Hinrich Schütze. 2022. The Better Your Syntax, the Better Your Semantics? Probing Pretrained Language Models for the English Comparative Correlative. Proceedings of the 2022 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing. pages 10859 - 10882 December 7-11, 2022. Association for Computational Linguistics. [https://aclanthology.org/2022.emnlp-main.746.pdf](https://aclanthology.org/2022.emnlp-main.746.pdf)