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The present paper reports on an investigation into an English un-participle pattern that is called unpassive, or is described as an adjectival passive. The main characteristic of the pattern is an (adjectival) past participle prefixed by un-, which is used as a predicative complement to a verb. To identify the pattern's exact formal and semantic make-up, we conducted an empirical analysis from a usage-based construction grammar perspective. The results indicate that, on closer examination, the un-participle construction does not represent a homogeneous category, but must be seen as a schematic template of related, though different, usage events that may have expanded analogously from a prototype construction. On the basis of our analyses and informed by findings from developmental studies, we suggest that the related constructions form a network.

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This page is a summary of: A constructional analysis of English un-participle constructions, Cognitive Linguistics, January 2015, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1515/cog-2014-0017.
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