Yuth, Limhout. A corpus-based study of English synonyms : confirm, verify and validate. Master's Degree(English Language Teaching). Thammasat University. Thammasat University Library. : Thammasat University, 2025.
A corpus-based study of English synonyms : confirm, verify and validate
Abstract:
This corpus-based study investigates the subtle differences between the English near-synonyms such as confirm, verify, and validate. These verbs are often treated as synonymous ; however, they exbibit distinctive usage patterns, degree of formality, and collocational patterns. Drawing data from the Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA), the study investigates their frequency, genre distribution, and collocational patterns. The findings show that confirm is used in both formal and informal registers to affirm existing information. In contrast, to verify and to validate are more context-specific with validate being closely tied to technical and academic discourse and verify being frequently linked to legal and digital contexts. Collocational analysis shows that confirm frequently co-occurs with nouns such as result, report, and finding, indicating its role in affirming known information. Verify is strongly associated with information, identity, and data that underscore its role in fact-checking and authentication. Meanwhile, validate has strong collocations with model, data, and result that emphasize its role in assessing reliability. These findings affirm that near-synonyms differ significantly in contextual and semantic usage that challenge the adequacy of dictionary definitions alone. They provide valuable insights for English teachers and learners that highlight the need for corpus-based approaches in vocabulary instruction to foster a deeper understanding of subtle lexical nuances and to support learners in making more precise and contextually appropriate word choices. This research encourages a comprehensive approach to teaching by using real data to demonstrate how words are used.
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