A Corpus-based Study of English Near-synonyms: Careful, cautious, and wary
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Abstract
This corpus-based study investigates the similarities and differences among the three synonymous adjectives: careful, cautious, and wary in terms of genre distribution, collocational patterns, semantic preference, and semantic prosody. Data were drawn from the Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA). The results reveal that careful occurs widely across both formal and informal genres, with the highest frequency in TV and movie subtitles. In contrast, cautious and wary are predominantly found in more formal genres, such as newspapers and academic text. Collocational patterns further distinguish that careful frequently co-occurs with nouns such as attention, consideration, analysis, planning, and examination. Cautious commonly collocates with approach, optimism, step, investor, and consumer. Wary tends to appear with nouns such as eye, investor, look, consumer, and glance. While cautious and wary share several collocates and semantic preferences, careful does not overlap significantly with either. The majority of noun collocates with careful fall under the theme reflecting cognitive or analytical processes. Most noun collocates of cautious tend to appear in financial or economic contexts, while those of wary primarily relate to people and social perception. In terms of semantic prosody, careful exhibits neutral tones, whereas cautious exhibits neutral to negative prosody and wary is generally associated with a more negative connotation. These findings demonstrate that, despite their synonymous definitions, careful, cautious, and wary are not fully interchangeable across contexts due to distinct linguistic and semantic patterns.
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References
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