Pettersson-Traba, Daniela2024-02-062024-02-062022Pettersson-Traba, Daniela. 2022. Ongoing semantic change in a modernizing society: A look at some adjectives from the olfactory domain in the Corpus of Historical American English. Corpora 17(3): 389- 421. DOI: 10.3366/cor.2022.0264http://hdl.handle.net/10347/32441This article has been accepted for publication by Edinburgh University Press: https://www.euppublishing.com/doi/full/10.3366/cor.2022.0264As a diachronic corpus-based investigation into onomasiological variation, this study has two main objectives. First, the paper analyses the evolution of the concept SWEETSMELLING as a whole, that is, as instantiated by the three near-synonymous adjectives, fragrant, perfumed, and scented, with a focus on language-external pressures for distributional changes. There seems to exist variation over time in the nouns that the concept typically collocates with, going from nouns referring to entities with a natural pleasant smell to entities with an artificial agreeable aroma. It is here argued that this change is motivated by the social and technological transformations experienced by American society after the First and Second Industrial Revolutions, a claim that finds preliminary empirical support in the distribution from 1820 to 2009 of a series of lexical indicators from the semantic domains CLEANING, COSMETICS, and TEXTILE & CLOTHING. Second, the distribution over time of the three adjectives is examined. The data point to a reorganization concerning the internal semantic structure of the synonym set, with scented gaining ground at the expense of fragrant and perfumed in several contexts of use. Additionally, the adjectives exhibit highly idiosyncratic collocational preferences, which go a long way towards explaining the alternation between them.engCC BY 4.0Cognitive SemanticsDistributional approachNear synonymyOnomasiological variationSemantic changeExtra-linguistic factorsOngoing semantic change in a modernizing society: A look at some adjectives from the olfactory domain in the Corpus of Historical American Englishjournal article10.3366/cor.2022.0264open access